Studio Developer Manual / Version 2010
Table Of Contents
Any reference to an object can cause it to stay alive. Thus, to find unwanted retainers,
it makes sense to null-out all references a component keeps in its onDestroy()
method, like in this code sketch:
public class MyComponent extends Component { private var foo:SomethingExpensive; public function MyComponent(config:myComponent = null) { super(config); foo = new SomethingExpensive(); } protected function onDestroy():void { foo = null; super.onDestroy(); } }
You have to be careful that even after your component has been destroyed, certain asynchronous
event callbacks may occur. Your event handlers have to be robust against fields already
being null
. Consider this example using a fictitious timeout
event:
public class MyComponent extends Component { private var foo:SomethingExpensive; public function MyComponent(config:myComponent = null) { super(config); foo = new SomethingExpensive(); addListener("timeout", handleTimeout); } private function handleTimeout():void { // Although we remove the listener in onDestroy, // an event may already be underway, so foo may // already be null in time it arrives: if (foo) { foo.doSomething(); } } protected function onDestroy():void { removeListener("timeout", handleTimeout); foo = null; super.onDestroy(); } }