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Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T01:09:06+00:00 2026-05-11T01:09:06+00:00

I’m using Instruments to try to determine if there are places in my application

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I’m using Instruments to try to determine if there are places in my application that I could be more efficient with use of memory. I’ve taken the time to get somewhat familiar with Instruments but I’m generally a newbie with hunting memory management issues having come from a Java background. I seem to be using about 1.82mb by calls to this method:

+ (NSString *)stringFromDateWithFormat:(NSDate *)date withFormat:(NSString *)format {     NSDateFormatter *dateFormatter;     NSString *result;      if (nil == date || nil == format)         return nil;      result = nil;     if (nil != (dateFormatter = [[NSDateFormatter allocWithZone:[self zone]] init])) {         [dateFormatter setDateFormat:format];             if (nil != (result = [dateFormatter stringFromDate:date])) {             [dateFormatter release];             return result;         }           [dateFormatter release];      }      return nil; } 

As I’m releasing the date formatter I’m wondering if the NSString result is my issue. It seems to me that the stringFromDate library call would return an autoreleased object so there’s nothing I can do to ‘manually’ manage it. A bit unsure of how to optimize this method.

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  1. 2026-05-11T01:09:07+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 1:09 am

    Is this method getting called a lot of times in a loop? Autoreleased objects only get released when the NSAutoreleasePool they’re in gets released. As I understand it, the default autorelease pool is created and release every event loop. It’s possible you’re creating too many autoreleased objects in the course of a single event loop. The solution is to create your own NSAutoreleasePool in an appropriate place, and release it to clear up autoreleased objects. An extreme example that illustrates the point:

    int i; NSAutoreasePool* pool = nil; for (i = 0; i < 1000000; ++i) {     /* Create a new pool every 10000 iterations */     if ((i % 10000) == 0) {         if (pool) [pool release];         pool = [[NSAutoreleasePool alloc] init];     }     [someObj someMethodThatCreatesAutoreleasedObjects]; } [pool release]; 

    In that example, the current pool is released every 10,000 iterations and a new one is created. You can read more about memory management in the Memory Management Programming Guide section on autorelease pools.

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