Is there any built-in function that allows me to deep copy an NSMutableArray
?
I looked around, some people say [aMutableArray copyWithZone:nil]
works as deep copy. But I tried and it seems to be a shallow copy.
Right now I am manually doing the copy with a for
loop:
//deep copy a 9*9 mutable array to a passed-in reference array
-deepMuCopy : (NSMutableArray*) array
toNewArray : (NSMutableArray*) arrayNew {
[arrayNew removeAllObjects];//ensure it's clean
for (int y = 0; y<9; y++) {
[arrayNew addObject:[NSMutableArray new]];
for (int x = 0; x<9; x++) {
[[arrayNew objectAtIndex:y] addObject:[NSMutableArray new]];
NSMutableArray *aDomain = [[array objectAtIndex:y] objectAtIndex:x];
for (int i = 0; i<[aDomain count]; i++) {
//copy object by object
NSNumber* n = [NSNumber numberWithInt:[[aDomain objectAtIndex:i] intValue]];
[[[arrayNew objectAtIndex:y] objectAtIndex:x] addObject:n];
}
}
}
}
but I'd like a cleaner, more succinct solution.
No, there isn't something built into the frameworks for this. Cocoa collections support shallow copies (with the
copy
or thearrayWithArray:
methods) but don't even talk about a deep copy concept.This is because "deep copy" starts to become difficult to define as the contents of your collections start including your own custom objects. Does "deep copy" mean every object in the object graph is a unique reference relative to every object in the original object graph?
If there was some hypothetical
NSDeepCopying
protocol, you could set this up and make decisions in all of your objects, but unfortunately there isn't. If you controlled most of the objects in your graph, you could create this protocol yourself and implement it, but you'd need to add a category to the Foundation classes as necessary.@AndrewGrant's answer suggesting the use of keyed archiving/unarchiving is a nonperformant but correct and clean way of achieving this for arbitrary objects. This book even goes so far so suggest adding a category to all objects that does exactly that to support deep copying.
The only way I know to easily do this is to archive and then immediately unarchive your array. It feels like a bit of a hack, but is actually explicitly suggested in the Apple Documentation on copying collections, which states:
The catch is that your object must support the NSCoding interface, since this will be used to store/load the data.
Swift 2 Version:
Copy by default gives a shallow copy
That is because calling
copy
is the same ascopyWithZone:NULL
also known as copying with the default zone. Thecopy
call does not result in a deep copy. In most cases it would give you a shallow copy, but in any case it depends on the class. For a thorough discussion I recommend the Collections Programming Topics on the Apple Developer site.initWithArray:CopyItems: gives a one-level deep copy
NSCoding
is the Apple recommended way to provide a deep copyFor a true deep copy (Array of Arrays) you will need
NSCoding
and archive/unarchive the object:For Dictonary
NSMutableDictionary *newCopyDict = (NSMutableDictionary *)CFPropertyListCreateDeepCopy(kCFAllocatorDefault, (CFDictionaryRef)objDict, kCFPropertyListMutableContainers);
For Array
NSMutableArray *myMutableArray = (NSMutableArray *)CFPropertyListCreateDeepCopy(NULL, arrData, kCFPropertyListMutableContainersAndLeaves);
As the Apple docs state,
The above code creates a new array whose members are shallow copies of the members of the old array.
Note that if you need to deeply copy an entire nested data structure - what the linked Apple docs call a "true deep copy" - then this approach will not suffice - see the other answers here.
I have a workaround if trying to achieve deep copy for JSON compatible data.
Simply take
NSData
ofNSArray
usingNSJSONSerialization
and then recreate JSON Object, this will create a complete new and fresh copy ofNSArray/NSDictionary
with new memory references of them.But make sure the objects of NSArray/NSDictionary and their children must be JSON serializable.