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Re: Let the runloop process its queue during a long operation
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Re: Let the runloop process its queue during a long operation


  • Subject: Re: Let the runloop process its queue during a long operation
  • From: Andreas Grosam <email@hidden>
  • Date: Wed, 6 Oct 2010 15:32:24 +0200

On Oct 6, 2010, at 1:53 PM, eveningnick eveningnick wrote:

> Hello
> I have an application that transforms a very big file, and during that
> operation i want to give a chance to user to press Esc and cancel this
> transformation. Therefore i need to make mainRunLoop run inbetween
> some "phases" of the file transformation.

It will be much easier to use a custom subclass of NSOperation for this kind of problem.
The operation's -main method should perform the transformation in a peace-wise manner and thereby repeatedly checking its cancelation state (-isCancelled method), like:

- (void) main {
    // runs on a secondary thread
    NSAutoreleasePool* pool = [[NSAutoreleasePool alloc] init];
    ...
    while (![self isCancelled] && !done) {
        // transform a peace of data
        ...
    }

    [delegate fileTransformOperationDidFinish:self];

    [pool release];
}

You add the operation to a NSOperationQueue instance which schedules its operations onto a secondary thread. From your main thread you may then cancel the operation by sending it the -cancel message.

There are several ways to notify the application (or some object) when the task is finished. Using a delegate is safe and easy. You may consider to define a protocol for the delegate. The delegate method may also schedule its actual work to the main thread (via -performSelectorOnMainThread:withObject:waitUntilDone:) if this is necessary.

Just be careful when your task requires itself a runloop (e.g. using asynchronous NSURLConnection) - since there exists no (implicit) one when invoking an NSOperation's -main method on a secondary thread. Properly implementing this will require more elaborated code, though.


Andreas


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