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Home/ Questions/Q 157269
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Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T10:28:27+00:00 2026-05-11T10:28:27+00:00

Suppose I have a function like this: – (NSSet *) someFunction { //code… return

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Suppose I have a function like this:

- (NSSet *) someFunction {     //code...     return [[[NSSet alloc] initWithObjets:obj1, obj2, nil] autorelease]; } 

When I call this function, do I need to do retain/release the return value? I’m assuming I do.

However, what if I don’t do autorelease, so someFunction now looks like this:

- (NSSet *) someFunction {     //code...     return [[NSSet alloc] initWithObjets:obj1, obj2, nil]; } 

In this case, I’m assuming I need to release but not retain the return value.

My question is, what is the suggested/best practice for these kinds of situations? Is one or the other version of someFunction recommended? Thanks.

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  1. 2026-05-11T10:28:28+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 10:28 am

    You should spend some time reading the Memory Management Programming Guide for Cocoa.

    The short is that if you get your reference through a method starts with ‘alloc’ or ‘new’ or contains ‘copy’, you own the reference and do not have to retain it. You do have provide for its release, either through a direct release or through using autorelease.

    If you get a reference any other way (through a class method or what-have-you), you do not own a reference, so you don’t have to release. If you want to keep a reference, you have to retain it.

    Over-all, it is really quite simple and effective.

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