When should weak references be used?

peter.murray.rust picture peter.murray.rust · Oct 29, 2009 · Viewed 7.5k times · Source

I recently came across a piece of Java code with WeakReferences - I had never seen them deployed although I'd come across them when they were introduced. Is this something that should be routinely used or only when one runs into memory problems? If the latter, can they be easily retrofitted or does the code need serious refactoring? Can the average Java (or C#) programmer generally ignore them?

EDIT Can any damage be done by over-enthusiastic use of WRs?

Answer

Matt Baker picture Matt Baker · Oct 29, 2009

Weak references are all about garbage collection. A standard object will not "disappear" until all references to it are severed, this means all the references your various objects have to it have to be removed before garbage collection will consider it garbage.

With a weak reference just because your object is referenced by other objects doesn't necessarily mean it's not garbage. It can still get picked up by GC and get removed from memory.

An example: If I have a bunch of Foo objects in my application I might want to use a Set to keep a central record of all the Foo's I have around. But, when other parts of my application remove a Foo object by deleting all references to it, I don't want the remaining reference my Set holds to that object to keep it from being garbage collected! Really I just want it to disappear from my set. This is where you'd use something like a Weak Set (Java has a WeakHashMap) instead, which uses weak references to its members instead of "strong" references.

If your objects aren't being garbage collected when you want them to then you've made an error in your book keeping, something's still holding a reference that you forgot to remove. Using weak references can ease the pain of such book keeping, since you don't have to worry about them keeping an object "alive" and un-garbage-collected, but you don't have to use them.