Mike Ash has written this introduction to ARC where he introduces something like:
__weak Foo *_weakFoo = [object foo];
Why would I want to do that for a local, temporary variable? __weak is a zeroing reference which will set the _weakFoo pointer automatically to nil as soon as the referenced object gets deallocated. Also, __weak is only available in iOS >= 5.
When would I run into trouble when I simply do this?:
Foo *_weakFoo = [object foo];
This is always expected to return an object or nil. My guess is this:
Foo *_weakFoo = [object foo];
[self doSomethingStupid]; // does something bad so foo gets deallocated
[_weakFoo doIt]; // CRASH! msg sent to deallocated instance 0x123456
One thing that still bugs me with ARC is: When does it know that I don't need an object anymore? I'd argue that when I set a pointer to nil or to something else it figures out that the previously referenced object isn't needed by this owner anymore and therefore maybe can go away. But the point is: I set it to nil. So it's nil anyways!
So when would __weak for a local variable make sense, and what kind of crazy thing must I do somewhere else so that I really need that?