Possible Duplicate:
alloc, init, and new in Objective-C
I am a little confused about [Class new]
and [[Class alloc] init]
. I have defined an object content
using [Class new]
and [[Class alloc] init]
.
(1). NSMutableArray *content = [NSMutableArray new];
(2). NSMutableArray *content = [[NSMutableArray alloc] init];
My question is about the differences between [Class new]
and [[Class alloc] init]
. For me, (1) and (2) are similar. If (1) and (2) are similar, then why do we use [[Class alloc] init]
most of the time, compared to [Class new]
? I think that there must be some difference.
Kindly explain the differences, pros & cons of both?
Alloc: Class method of NSObject. Returns a new instance of the receiving class.
Init: Instance method of NSObject. Implemented by subclasses to initialize a new object (the receiver) immediately after memory for it has been allocated.
New: Class method of NSObject. Allocates a new instance of the receiving class, sends it an init message, and returns the initialized object.
Release: Instance method of NSObject delegate. Decrements the receiver’s reference count.
Autorelease: Instance method of NSObject delegate. Adds the receiver to the current autorelease pool.
Retain: Instance method of NSObject delegate. Increments the receiver’s reference count.
Copy: Instance method of NSObject delegate. Returns a new instance that’s a copy of the receiver.
So to conclude we can say that
alloc goes with init
new = alloc + init