Here is a more technical description with the gory details. Consider the code
for (object expression in collection expression) { statements }
here is what happens when you run it:
collection expression
is evaluated exactly once and the result is used as the collection object to iterate over. This means it is safe to write code such as for (object in [NSDictionary
keyEnumerator]) …
. object expression
is set to nil
and the loop immediately terminates. object expression
is set to the object, then statements
are executed. statements
can contain break
and continue
commands, which will abort the iteration or skip to the next loop iteration as expected. object expression
is set to nil
. This allows you to determine whether the iteration finished because a break
command was used (in which case object expression
will remain set to the last object that was iterated over) or because it iterated over all the objects (in which case object expression
will be set to nil
). statements
must not make any changes to the collection object; if they do, it is a hard error and the fast enumeration terminates by invoking objc_enumerationMutation
, a runtime function that normally aborts the program but which can be customized by Foundation libraries via objc_set_mutation_handler
to do something different, such as raising an exception.
Next: Fast enumeration protocol, Previous: c99-like fast enumeration syntax, Up: Fast enumeration [Contents][Index]
© Free Software Foundation
Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3.
https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-12.2.0/gcc/Fast-enumeration-details.html