What is the difference between [Class new] and [[Class alloc] init] in iOS? [duplicate] What is the difference between [Class new] and [[Class alloc] init] in iOS? [duplicate] ios ios

What is the difference between [Class new] and [[Class alloc] init] in iOS? [duplicate]


Alloc: Class method of NSObject. Returns a new instance of the receiving class.

Init: Instance method of NSObject. Implemented by subclasses to initialize a new object (the receiver) immediately after memory for it has been allocated.

New: Class method of NSObject. Allocates a new instance of the receiving class, sends it an init message, and returns the initialized object.

Release: Instance method of NSObject delegate. Decrements the receiver’s reference count.

Autorelease: Instance method of NSObject delegate. Adds the receiver to the current autorelease pool.

Retain: Instance method of NSObject delegate. Increments the receiver’s reference count.

Copy: Instance method of NSObject delegate. Returns a new instance that’s a copy of the receiver.

So to conclude we can say that

alloc goes with init

new = alloc + init


The +new method is simply shorthand for +alloc and -init. The ownership semantics are identical. The only benefit to using +new is that it is more concise. If you need to provide arguments to the class's initialiser, you will have to use the +alloc and -initWith... methods instead.


Here: alloc, init, and new in Objective-C

Basically it's a question of modern versus traditional. The most direct advantage of init over new is that there are many custom init methods.