I’m familiar with using AsyncTask in Android: create a subclass, call execute on an instance of the subclass and onPostExecute is called on the UI thread or main thread. What’s the equivalent in iOS?
I’m familiar with using AsyncTask in Android: create a subclass, call execute on an
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Answer to Original Question:
Grand Central Dispatch (GCD) offers a mechanism to perform tasks in the background, though it works in a structurally different way than AsyncTask. To perform something asynchronously, you just need to create a queue (like a thread) and then pass a block to
dispatch_async()to be performed in the background. I find it neater than AsyncTask, as there is no subclassing involved; it is more or less plug-and-play wherever you have code you’d like to execute in the background. An example:Other Points:
1) Callbacks
If you want to perform a task in the background and update the UI (or do something on another thread) when the background task is done, you can simply nest the dispatch calls:
2) Global Queues
When creating a queue, you can also use the
dispatch_get_global_queue()function to get a global dispatch queue with a certain priority (such asDISPATCH_QUEUE_PRIORITY_HIGH). These queues are universally accessible and are useful when you want to assign multiple tasks to the same thread/queue. Note that memory is managed for you completely by iOS.3) Memory
There is sometimes some confusion regarding memory management and dispatch queues because they have their own
dispatch_retain/dispatch_releasefunctions. However, rest assured that they are treated as Objective-C objects by ARC, so you don’t need to worry about calling these functions. Referencing rob mayoff’s great answer regarding GCD and ARC, you can see the documentation describe GCD queues’ equivalence with Objective-C objects:4) Multiple Tasks/Blocks
I’ll add that GCD has a grouping interface supports synchronizing multiple asynchronous blocks if a task cannot continue until multiple asynchronous activities have completed. Jörn Eyrich and ɲeuroburɳ provide a generous explanation of this topic here. If you need this functionality, I would highly recommend taking a few minutes to read both of their answers closely and understand the differences between them.
The documentation has a wealth of information on the topic if you are so inclined.