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Re: Need advice about NSTextField, performClick IBAction, and memory man


From: bertrand . dekoninck
Subject: Re: Need advice about NSTextField, performClick IBAction, and memory management
Date: Fri, 14 Dec 2018 13:25:11 +0100


Envoyé de mon iPhone

> Le 14 déc. 2018 à 10:20, Riccardo Mottola <riccardo.mottola@libero.it> a 
> écrit :
> 
> Hi Bertrand,
> 
> Josh Freeman wrote:
>> 
>> 
>>    You can set the textfield to only send its action when Enter's pressed 
>> (instead of every time editing finishes): In Interface Builder, select the 
>> textfield, then show the Inspector panel. Under the Inspector's Attributes 
>> tab, switch the textfield's 'Send Action' mode from "End editing" to "Enter 
>> only". (You can also do this programmatically by sending the textfield's 
>> cell a setSendsActionOnEndEditing:NO message.)
> 
> You have the same option in Gorm. Select the TextField, go to the inspector 
> and in the attributes you have "Send action on" Enter only (what you probably 
> want) or "End Editing" which is essentially always when your control looses 
> focus.
> 
>> These three lines in createNewTask: cause the issue:
>> 
>>         NSString *string = [[NSString alloc] init];
>>         string = [textField stringValue];
>>     ...
>>     [string release];// With this, I've got an "exec_BAD_ACCESS" error when 
>> calling three times in a row createNewTask with the same string in textField
> 
> You are trying to release the textField value, not the empty one you 
> allocated. By assigning the the value you overwrite your own object.
> Actually, this code will leak memory: the first allocated string.
> 
>> 
>>    The first line sets 'string' to a retained, empty string object. The next 
>> line sets 'string' to the object returned by [textField stringValue], 
>> leaking the previous string object (its address was forgotten while it was 
>> still retained). 'String' then points to an object that wasn't retained by 
>> your code, so sending it a release message will cause it to deallocate while 
>> it's still referenced elsewhere (segfaulting if it's accessed after that).
>> 
>>    You can fix the issue by removing the first & third lines (empty-string 
>> allocation, release call), and moving the 'string' var definition to the 
>> second line:
>> 
>>         NSString *string = [textField stringValue];
> 
> Another way to explain what Josh is saying:
> You need to alloc+init a string if you want to work on it, but in this case, 
> you declatr *string just as a pointer to get the value of the textField, so 
> you don't own the value and have no need to free it.
> Conversely, if you need to "work" on the value retturned by the textField for 
> more than a run-loop, or pass it to a thread or to be blunt "for a long 
> time", then you need to either retain or copy it. E.g. you get a value from a 
> window, then close the window but want to continue working on that. If you 
> retain or copy your object, then you need to release it.
> 
> 
Thanks. This, I already understood yet thanks to Josh.

> Riccardo
> 



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