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iPhone development tips

Revision as of 20:18, 27 March 2010 by Lensovet (talk | contribs) (audiosession-related stuff)

  • Distinction between calling [self.property release] and self.property = nil
The latter will allow you to assign the variable later and should generally be used when you want to "clear" a variable for memory saving purposes but will have a need to assign a value to it again sometime in the future. release will completely invalidate the object and attempting to call anything on it afterwards will result in a EXC_BAD_ACCESS error every time. What does this mean in the grand scheme of things? You will most likely use release in only one place in your code – the object's dealloc method.
  • Watching out for deallocation and unloading of views
Keep in mind that if a bunch of view controllers nested one above the other, there's a bunch of unloading and deallocating happening when these views disappear (hopefully, as you should be keeping your memory usage to a minimum). In one of my view controllers, I was overfreeing controller properties because I attempted to free them inside both viewDidUnload: and dealloc methods. Just remember that a view should only be getting dealloc'ed after it's been unloaded, so you only need to free most things in viewDidUnload:.
  • Passing viewWillLoad/viewDidLoad/viewWillAppear/viewDidAppear/etc methods to child view controllers
Say you have a view controller which manages a child view controller. The child view controller's viewWillAppear and related notification methods will *not* be called automatically by the OS for you. Your parent view controller needs to call those methods manually.
  • Xcode is unable to connect to your device for some reason
Sometimes Xcode will show your phone as being connected but will be unable to initialize it for development purpose for some bizarre reason. Simply restart your phone to fix the problem.
  • GPS shuts off when user locks the screen manually or the device auto-locks
You can use [UIApplication sharedApplication].idleTimerDisabled = YES; to keep the screen on, but this is bad for the screen itself and takes a nice toll on battery life. Instead, set up an AVAudioSession with the AVAudioSessionCategoryPlayback category, then set the kAudioSessionProperty_OverrideCategoryMixWithOthers property (so that the user's iPod can keep playing) and a more aggressive I/O buffer using kAudioSessionProperty_PreferredHardwareIOBufferDuration. Then, use AVAudioPlayer to play a "recording" of total silence on endless loop for when you need to keep GPS running. Note: accelerometer and WiFi still shut off when the screen is locked.
  • Calling [[AVAudioSession sharedInstance] setPreferredIOBufferDuration: always errors, regardless of what value you use!
See my response on StackOverflow. Basically this is a bug in the interface and you have to use the plain C method instead of the Objective-C one to get this to work.