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Home/ Questions/Q 6089621
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 23, 20262026-05-23T12:07:14+00:00 2026-05-23T12:07:14+00:00

I’ve been reading the Beginning iPhone 4 Development book and they have one tutorial

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I’ve been reading the “Beginning iPhone 4 Development” book and they have one tutorial for using navigation controllers. In this tutorial we push a view controller (named childController) onto the view. But since we don’t want to “expose” this controller for other classes we have not created any accessor methods for it. So in the viewDidUnload the authors have written:

- (void)viewDidUnload {
    [childController release], childController = nil;
    [super viewDidUnload];
    // Release any retained subviews of the main view.
    // e.g. self.myOutlet = nil;
}

I really don’t understand the comma sign after the release? This code is actually working for me. I haven’t received any errors or memory leaks.

But to my understanding shouldn’t it be like this instead:

- (void)viewDidUnload {
    [childController release]; 
    childController = nil;
    [super viewDidUnload];
    // Release any retained subviews of the main view.
    // e.g. self.myOutlet = nil;
}
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-23T12:07:15+00:00Added an answer on May 23, 2026 at 12:07 pm
     [childController release], childController = nil;
    

    this is plain C, comma operator aimed at “sequencing” expressions. actually, in this case, it is completely equivalent to:

    [childController release];
    childController = nil;
    

    the only thing that changes is readability (for worse or better, it depends…)

    but in general the sequencing operator evaluates to the last statement’s value (i.e., values of all operands are discarded except the last one).

    int a, b;
    int c = (a = 1), (b = 2);
    

    c would be 2 after execution of this statement.

    EDIT: from the link I added:

    There’s hardly any reason to use a comma operator anywhere other than in the first and third controlling expressions of a for loop, and in fact most of the commas you see in C programs are not comma operators. In particular, the commas between the arguments in a function call are not comma operators; they are just punctuation which separate several argument expressions. It’s pretty easy to see that they cannot be comma operators, otherwise in a call like

    edit: a better example:

    int a = 1;
    int b = 2;
    b = printf("%d, %d", a,b), a+b;
    

    this will first print:

    1, 2
    

    then assign 3 to b.

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