It tells the compiler that any variable marked by it must be treated in a special way when it is used inside a block. Normally, variables and their contents that are also used in blocks are copied, thus any modification done to these variables don't show outside the block. When they are marked with __block
, the modifications done inside the block are also visible outside of it.
For an example and more info, see The __block Storage Type in Apple's Blocks Programming Topics.
The important example is this one:
extern NSInteger CounterGlobal;
static NSInteger CounterStatic;
{
NSInteger localCounter = 42;
__block char localCharacter;
void (^aBlock)(void) = ^(void) {
++CounterGlobal;
++CounterStatic;
CounterGlobal = localCounter; // localCounter fixed at block creation
localCharacter = 'a'; // sets localCharacter in enclosing scope
};
++localCounter; // unseen by the block
localCharacter = 'b';
aBlock(); // execute the block
// localCharacter now 'a'
}
In this example, both localCounter
and localCharacter
are modified before the block is called. However, inside the block, only the modification to localCharacter
would be visible, thanks to the __block
keyword. Conversely, the block can modify localCharacter
and this modification is visible outside of the block.
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