Can someone explain when and when not to use a 'weak' assignment to a delegate pointer in Swift, and why?
My understanding is that if you use a protocol that is not defined as a class you cannot, nor want to, assign your delegate pointer to weak.
protocol MyStructProtocol{
//whatever
}
struct MyStruct {
var delegate: MyStructProtocol?
}
However, when your protocol is defined as a class type protocol then you DO want to set your delegate to a weak pointer?
protocol MyClassProtocol: class{
//whatever
}
class MyClass {
weak var delegate: MyClassProtocol?
}
Am I correct? In Apple's swift guide there class protocol examples aren't using weak assignments, but in my testing I'm seeing strong reference cycles if my delegates aren't weakly referenced.
You generally make class protocols weak
to avoid the risk of a “strong reference cycle” (formerly known as a “retain cycle”). (Note, we now do that by adding the AnyObject
protocol to a protocol’s inheritance list; see Class-Only Protocols; we do not use the class
keyword anymore.) Failure to make the delegate weak
does not mean that you inherently have a strong reference cycle, but merely that you could have one.
With struct
types, though, the strong reference cycle risk is greatly diminished because struct
types are not “reference” types, so it is harder to create strong reference cycle. But if the delegate object is a class object, then you might want to make the protocol a class protocol and make it weak.
In my opinion, making class delegates weak
is only partially to alleviate the risk of a strong reference cycle. It also is a question of ownership. Most delegate protocols are situations where the object in question has no business claiming ownership over the delegate, but merely where the object in question is providing the ability to inform the delegate of something (or request something of it). E.g., if you want a view controller to have some text field delegate methods, the text field has no right to make a claim of ownership over the view controller.