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Home/ Questions/Q 8562133
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 11, 20262026-06-11T16:39:53+00:00 2026-06-11T16:39:53+00:00

I’ve seen this particular implementation of the singleton pattern everywhere: + (CargoBay *)sharedManager {

  • 0

I’ve seen this particular implementation of the singleton pattern everywhere:

+ (CargoBay *)sharedManager {
   static CargoBay *_sharedManager = nil;
   static dispatch_once_t onceToken;
   dispatch_once(&onceToken, ^{
      _sharedManager = [[CargoBay alloc] init];
   });
   return _sharedManager;
}

and it seems to be accepted as good practice (this one in particular is from CargoBay).

The only part I don’t understand is the first line static CargoBay *_sharedManager = nil;.

Why are you setting that static variable to nil?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-11T16:39:55+00:00Added an answer on June 11, 2026 at 4:39 pm

    It’s just a matter of readability, convention and practice. It’s not really needed, because:

    One. Its value won’t ever be checked. In older singleton implementations there used to be the famous

    + (id)sharedInstance
    {
        static SomeClass *shared = nil;
        if (shared == nil)
            shared = [[SomeClass alloc] init];
    
        return shared;
    }
    

    code – for this method to work, the backing variable has to be initialized to nil, since if it wasn’t nil for the first time, it would falsely omit the alloc-init in the if part and return a junk pointer. However, with the GCD solution, the nil-check is not anymore needed – GCD handles the ‘execute this code only once’ pragma.

    Two. But nevertheless: static variables are implicitly initialized to zero. So even if you just write static id shared; it will initially be nil.

    Three. Why this might be good practice? Because, despite the first two reasons I mentioned, it’s still more readable to let the reader of the source code know that something is explicitly initialized to zero. Or there may even exist some non-conforming implementations where static variables are not properly autoinitialized, and then this action shall be taken.

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