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Transitioning to ARC Release Notes

 
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Automatic Reference Counting (ARC) is a compiler feature that provides automatic memory management of Objective-C objects. Rather than having to think about about retain and release operations, ARC allows you to concentrate on the interesting code, the object graphs, and the relationships between objects in your application.

image: Art/ARC_Illustration.jpgimage: Art/ARC_Illustration.jpg

Contents:

Summary
ARC Overview
Managing Toll-Free Bridging
Common Issues While Converting a Project
Frequently Asked Questions


Summary

ARC works by adding code at compile time to ensure that objects live as long as necessary, but no longer. Conceptually, it follows the same memory management conventions as manual reference counting (described in Advanced Memory Management Programming Guide), by adding the appropriate retain, release, and autorelease method calls for you.

In order for the compiler to generate correct code, ARC restricts the methods you can use and how you use toll-free bridging (see “Toll-Free Bridged Types”). ARC also introduces new lifetime qualifiers for object references and declared properties.

ARC is supported in Xcode 4.2 for MacOSXv10.6 and v10.7 (64-bit applications) and for iOS4 and iOS5. Weak references are not supported in MacOSXv10.6 and iOS4.

Xcode has a new tool that automates the mechanical parts of the ARC conversion (such as removing retain and release calls) and helps you to fix issues the migrator can’t handle automatically. The migration tool converts all files in a project to use ARC. You can also choose to use ARC on a per-file basis if it’s more convenient for you to use manual reference counting for some files.

See also:

ARC Overview

Instead of you having to remember when to use retain, release, and autorelease, ARC evaluates the lifetime requirements of your objects and automatically inserts the appropriate method calls for you at compile time. The compiler also generates appropriate dealloc methods for you. In general, if you’re only using ARC the traditional Cocoa naming conventions are important only if you need to interoperate with code that uses manual reference counting.

A complete and correct implementation of a Person class might look like this:

@interface Person : NSObject
@property (nonatomic, strong) NSString *firstName;
@property (nonatomic, strong) NSString *lastName;
@property (nonatomic, strong) NSNumber *yearOfBirth;
@property (nonatomic, strong) Person *spouse;
@end
 
@implementation Person
@synthesize firstName, lastName, yearOfBirth, spouse;
@end

(The strong attribute is described in “ARC Introduces New Lifetime Qualifiers”.)

Using ARC, you could implement a contrived method like this:

- (void)contrived {
    Person *aPerson = [[Person alloc] init];
    [aPerson setFirstName:@"William"];
    [aPerson setLastName:@"Dudney"];
    [aPerson:setYearOfBirth:[[NSNumber alloc] initWithInteger:2011]];
    NSLog(@"aPerson: %@", aPerson);
}

ARC takes care of memory management so that neither the Person nor the NSNumber objects are leaked.

You could also safely implement a takeLastNameFrom: method of Person like this:

- (void)takeLastNameFrom:(Person *)person {
    NSString *oldLastname = [self lastName];
    [self setLastName:[person lastName]];
    NSLog(@"Lastname changed from %@ to %@", oldLastname, [self lastName]);
}

ARC ensures that oldLastName is not deallocated before the NSLog statement.

ARC Enforces New Rules

To work, ARC imposes some new rules that are not present when using other compiler modes. The rules are intended to provide a fully reliable memory management model; in some cases, they simply enforce best practice, in some others they simplify your code or are obvious corollaries of your not having to deal with memory management. If you violate these rules, you get an immediate compile-time error, not a subtle bug that may become apparent at runtime.

  • You cannot explicitly invoke dealloc, or implement or invoke retain, release, retainCount, or autorelease.

    The prohibition extends to using @selector(retain), @selector(release), and so on.

    You may implement a dealloc method if you need to manage resources other than releasing instance variables. You do not have to (indeed you cannot) release instance variables, but you may need to invoke [systemClassInstance setDelegate:nil] on system classes and other code that isn’t compiled using ARC.

    Custom dealloc methods in ARC do not require a call to [super dealloc] (it actually results in a compiler error). The chaining to super is automated and enforced by the compiler.

    You can still use CFRetain, CFRelease, and other related functions with Core Foundation-style objects (see “Managing Toll-Free Bridging”).

  • You cannot use NSAllocateObject or NSDeallocateObject.

    You create objects using alloc; the runtime takes care of deallocating objects.

  • You cannot use object pointers in C structures.

    Rather than using a struct, you can create an Objective-C class to manage the data instead.

  • There is no casual casting between id and void *.

    You must use special casts that tell the compiler about object lifetime. You need to do this to cast between Objective-C objects and Core Foundation types that you pass as function arguments. For more details, see “Managing Toll-Free Bridging”.

  • Cannot use NSAutoreleasePool objects.

    ARC provides @autoreleasepool blocks instead. These have an advantage of being more efficient than NSAutoreleasePool.

  • You cannot use memory zones.

    There is no need to use NSZone any more—they are ignored by the modern Objective-C runtime anyway.

To allow interoperation with manual retain-release code, ARC imposes some constraints on method and variable naming:

  • You cannot give a property a name that begins with new.

ARC Introduces New Lifetime Qualifiers

ARC introduces several new lifetime qualifiers for objects, and zeroing weak references. A weak reference does not extend the lifetime of the object it points to. A zeroing weak reference automatically becomes nil if the object it points to is deallocated.

You should take advantage of these qualifiers to manage the object graphs in your program. In particular, ARC does not guard against strong reference cycles (previously known as retain cycles—see “Practical Memory Management”). Judicious use of weak relationships will help to ensure you don’t create cycles.

Property Attributes

The keywords weak and strong are introduced as new declared property attributes, as shown in the following examples.

// The following declaration is a synonym for: @property(retain) MyClass *myObject;
@property(strong) MyClass *myObject;
 
// The following declaration is similar to "@property(assign) MyClass *myObject;"
// except that if the MyClass instance is deallocated,
// the property value is set to nil instead of remaining as a dangling pointer.
@property(weak) MyClass *myObject;

Variable Qualifiers

You use the following lifetime qualifiers for variables just like you would, say, const.

__strong
__weak
__unsafe_unretained
__autoreleasing

__strong is the default. __weak specifies a zeroing weak reference to an object. __unsafe_unretained specifies weak reference to an object that is not zeroing—if the object it references is deallocated, the pointer is left dangling. You use __autoreleasing to denote arguments that are passed by reference (id *) and are autoreleased on return.

Take care when using __weak variables on the stack. Consider the following example:

NSString __weak *string = [[NSString alloc] initWithFormat:@"First Name: %@", [self firstName]];
NSLog(@"string: %@", string);

Although string is used after the initial assignment, there is no other strong reference to the string object at the time of assignment; it is therefore immediately deallocated. The log statement shows that string has a null value.

You also need to take care with objects passed by reference. The following code will work:

NSError *error = nil;
BOOL OK = [myObject performOperationWithError:&error];
if (!OK) {
    // Report the error.
    // ...

However, the error declaration is implicitly:

NSError * __strong e = nil;

and the method declaration would typically be:

-(BOOL)performOperationWithError:(NSError * __autoreleasing *)error;

The compiler therefore rewrites the code:

NSError __strong *error = nil;
NSError __autoreleasing *tmp = error;
BOOL OK = [myObject performOperationWithError:&tmp];
error = tmp;
if (!OK) {
    // Report the error.
    // ...

The mismatch between the local variable declaration (__strong) and the parameter (__autoreleasing) causes the compiler to create the temporary variable. You can get the original pointer by declaring the parameter id __strong * when you take the address of a __strong variable. Alternatively you can declare the variable as __autoreleasing.

Use Lifetime Qualifiers to Avoid Strong Reference Cycles

You can use lifetime qualifiers to avoid strong reference cycles. For example, typically if you have a graph of objects arranged in a parent-child hierarchy and parents need to refer to their children and vice versa, then you make the parent-to-child relationship strong and the child-to-parent relationship weak. Other situations may be more subtle, particularly when they involve block objects.

In manual reference counting mode, __block id x; has the effect of not retaining x. In ARC mode, __block id x; defaults to retaining x (just like all other values). To get the manual reference counting mode behavior under ARC, you could use __unsafe_unretained __block id x;. As the name __unsafe_unretained implies, however, having a non-retained variable is dangerous (because it can dangle) and is therefore discouraged. Two better options are to either use __weak (if you don’t need to support iOS4 or OSXv10.6), or set the __block value to nil to break the retain cycle.

The following code fragment illustrates this issue using a pattern that is sometimes used in manual reference counting.

MyViewController *myController = [[MyViewController alloc] init…];
// ...
myController.completionHandler =  ^(NSInteger result) {
   [myController dismissViewControllerAnimated:YES completion:nil];
};
[self presentViewController:myController animated:YES completion:^{
   [myController release];
}];

As described, instead, you can use a __block qualifier and set the myController variable to nil in the completion handler:

__block MyViewController *myController = [[MyViewController alloc] init…];
// ...
myController.completionHandler =  ^(NSInteger result) {
    [myController dismissViewControllerAnimated:YES completion:nil];
    myController = nil;
};

Alternatively, you can use a temporary __weak variable. The following example illustrates a simple implementation:

MyViewController *myController = [[MyViewController alloc] init…];
// ...
__weak MyViewController *weakMyViewController = myController;
myController.completionHandler =  ^(NSInteger result) {
    [weakMyViewController dismissViewControllerAnimated:YES completion:nil];
};

For non-trivial cycles, however, you should use:

MyViewController *myController = [[MyViewController alloc] init…];
// ...
__weak MyViewController *weakMyController = myController;
myController.completionHandler =  ^(NSInteger result) {
    MyViewController *strongMyController = weakMyController;
    if (strongMyController) {
        // ...
        [strongMyController dismissViewControllerAnimated:YES completion:nil];
        // ...
    }
    else {
        // Probably nothing...
    }
};

In some cases you can use __unsafe_unretained if the class isn’t __weak compatible. This can, however, become impractical for nontrivial cycles because it can be hard or impossible to validate that the __unsafe_unretained pointer is still valid and still points to the same object in question.

ARC Provides a New Statement to Manage Autorelease Pools

Using ARC, you cannot manage autorelease pools directly using the NSAutoReleasePool class. Instead, ARC introduces a statement construct to the Objective-C grammar:

@autoreleasepool {
     // Code, such as a loop that creates a large number of temporary objects.
}

This simple structure allows the compiler to reason about the reference count state.

On entry, an autorelease pool is pushed. On normal exit (break, return, goto, fall-through, and so on) the autorelease pool is popped. For compatibility with existing code, if exit is due to an exception, the autorelease pool is not popped.

This syntax is available in all Objective-C modes. It is more efficient than using the NSAutoReleasePool class; you are therefore encouraged to adopt it in place of using the NSAutoReleasePool.

Patterns for Managing Outlets Become Consistent Across Platforms

The patterns for declaring outlets in iOS and OSX change with ARC and become consistent across both platforms. The pattern you should typically adopt is: outlets should be weak, except for those from File’s Owner to top-level objects in a nib file (or a storyboard scene) which should be strong.

Full details are given in “Nib Files” in Resource Programming Guide.

Stack Variables Are Initialized with nil

Using ARC, strong, weak, and autoreleasing stack variables are now implicitly initialized with nil. For example:

- (void)myMethod {
    NSString *name;
    NSLog(@"name: %@", name);
}

will log null for the value of name rather than perhaps crashing.

Use Compiler Flags to Enable and Disable ARC

You enable ARC using a new -fobjc-arc compiler flag. You can also choose to use ARC on a per-file basis if it’s more convenient for you to use manual reference counting for some files. For projects that employ ARC as the default approach, you can disable ARC for a specific file using a new -fno-objc-arc compiler flag for that file.

ARC is supported in Xcode 4.2 for MacOSXv10.6 and v10.7 (64-bit applications) and for iOS4 and iOS5. Weak references are not supported in MacOSXv10.6 and iOS4. There is no ARC support in Xcode 4.1 and earlier.

Managing Toll-Free Bridging

In many Cocoa applications, you need to use Core Foundation-style objects, whether from the Core Foundation framework itself (such as CFArrayRef or CFMutableDictionaryRef) or from frameworks that adopt Core Foundation conventions such as Core Graphics (you might use types like CGColorSpaceRef and CGGradientRef).

The compiler does not automatically manage the lifetimes of Core Foundation objects; you must call CFRetain and CFRelease (or the corresponding type-specific variants) as dictated by the Core Foundation memory management rules (see Memory Management Programming Guide for Core Foundation).

If you cast between Objective-C and Core Foundation-style objects, you need to tell the compiler about the ownership semantics of the object using either a cast (defined in objc/runtime.h) or a Core Foundation-style macro (defined in NSObject.h):

  1. If you prefer the appearance of function calls, you can use macros like CFBridgingRetain. The macros use new modifiers to cast between id and void* to tell the compiler about the retain count effect on the void*.

    NS_INLINE CFTypeRef CFBridgingRetain(id X) {
        return (__bridge_retain CFTypeRef)X;
    }
     
    NS_INLINE id CFBridgingRelease(CFTypeRef X) {
        return (__bridge_transfer id)X;
    }

    A no-op conversion still requires (__bridge).

  2. If you prefer “C-like” casts, you can use the casts directly:

    id my_id;
    CFStringRef my_cfref;
    ...
    NSString   *a = (__bridge NSString*)my_cfref;     // Noop cast.
    CFStringRef b = (__bridge CFStringRef)my_id;      // Noop cast.
    ...
    NSString   *c = (__bridge_transfer NSString*)my_cfref; // -1 on the CFRef
    CFStringRef d = (__bridge_retained CFStringRef)my_id;  // returned CFRef is +1

The Compiler Handles CF Objects Returned From Cocoa Methods

The compiler understands Objective-C methods that return Core Foundation types follow the historical Cocoa naming conventions (see Advanced Memory Management Programming Guide). For example, the compiler knows that, in iOS, the CGColor returned by the CGColor method of UIColor is not owned. The following methods therefore work as-is:

- (id)initWithCoder:(NSCoder *)aDecoder {
    self = [super initWithCoder:aDecoder];
    if (self) {
        CAGradientLayer *gradientLayer = (CAGradientLayer *)[self layer];
        gradientLayer.colors = [NSArray arrayWithObjects:[[UIColor darkGrayColor] CGColor],
                                                         [[UIColor lightGrayColor] CGColor], nil];
        gradientLayer.startPoint = CGPointMake(0.0, 0.0);
        gradientLayer.endPoint = CGPointMake(1.0, 1.0);
    }
    return self;
}

Cast Function Parameters Using Ownership Keywords

When you cast between Objective-C and Core Foundation objects in function calls, you need to tell the compiler about the ownership semantics of the passed object. The ownership rules for Core Foundation objects are those specified in the Core Foundation memory management rules (see Memory Management Programming Guide for Core Foundation); rules for Objective-C objects are specified in Advanced Memory Management Programming Guide.

In the following code fragment, the array passed to the CGGradientCreateWithColors function requires an appropriate cast. Ownership of the object returned by arrayWithObjects: is not passed to the function, thus the cast is __bridge.

NSArray *colors = [NSArray arrayWithObjects:[[UIColor darkGrayColor] CGColor],
                                            [[UIColor lightGrayColor] CGColor], nil];
CGGradientRef gradient = CGGradientCreateWithColors(colorSpace, (__bridge CFArrayRef)colors, locations);

The code fragment is shown in context in the following method implementation. Notice also the use of Core Foundation memory management functions where dictated by the Core Foundation memory management rules.

- (void)drawRect:(CGRect)rect {
    CGContextRef ctx = UIGraphicsGetCurrentContext();
    CGColorSpaceRef colorSpace = CGColorSpaceCreateDeviceGray();
    CGFloat locations[2] = {0.0, 1.0};
    NSArray *colors = [NSArray arrayWithObjects:[[UIColor darkGrayColor] CGColor],
                                                [[UIColor lightGrayColor] CGColor], nil];
    CGGradientRef gradient = CGGradientCreateWithColors(colorSpace, (__bridge CFArrayRef)colors, locations);
    CGColorSpaceRelease(colorSpace);  // Release owned Core Foundation object.
    CGPoint startPoint = CGPointMake(0.0, 0.0);
    CGPoint endPoint = CGPointMake(CGRectGetMaxX(self.bounds), CGRectGetMaxY(self.bounds));
    CGContextDrawLinearGradient(ctx, gradient, startPoint, endPoint,
                                kCGGradientDrawsBeforeStartLocation | kCGGradientDrawsAfterEndLocation);
    CGGradientRelease(gradient);  // Release owned Core Foundation object.
}

Common Issues While Converting a Project

When migrating existing projects, you are likely to run into various issues. Here are some common issues, together with solutions.

You can’t invoke retain, release, or autorelease.

This is a feature. You also can’t write:

while ([x retainCount]) { [x release]; }
You can’t invoke dealloc.

You typically invoke dealloc if you are implementing a singleton or replacing an object in an init methods. For singletons, use the shared instance pattern. In init methods, you don't have to call dealloc anymore, because the object will be freed when you overwrite self.

You can’t use NSAutoreleasePool objects.

Use the new @autoreleasepool{} construct instead. This forces a block structure on your autorelease pool, and is about six times faster than NSAutoreleasePool. @autoreleasepool even works in non-ARC code. Because @autoreleasepool is so much faster than NSAutoreleasePool, many old “performance hacks” can simply be replaced with unconditional @autoreleasepool.

The migrator handles simple uses of NSAutoreleasePool, but it can't handle complex conditional cases, or cases where a variable is defined inside the body of the new @autoreleasepool and used after it.

ARC requires you to assign the result of [super init] to self in init methods.

The following is invalid in ARC init methods:

[super init];

The simple fix is to change it to:

self = [super init];

The proper fix is to do that, and check the result for nil before continuing:

self = [super init];
if (self) {
   ...
You can’t implement custom retain or release methods.

Implementing custom retain or release methods breaks weak pointers. There are several common reasons for wanting to provide custom implementations:

  • Performance.

    Please don’t do this any more; the implementation of retain and release for NSObject is much faster now. If you still find problems, please file bugs.

  • To implement a custom weak pointer system.

    Use __weak instead.

  • To implement singleton class.

    Use the shared instance pattern instead. Alternatively, use class instead of instance methods, which avoids having to allocate the object at all.

If you you find that you must implement custom retain or release methods, then you must also implement the following method in your class:

-(BOOL)supportsWeakPointers { return NO; }

This method will prevent weak pointers from being formed to your objects. You are strongly encouraged to find a solution that doesn’t require implementing your own retain and release methods instead of doing this.

You can't use strong ids in C structures.

For example, the following code won’t compile:

struct X { id x; float y; };

This is because x defaults to strongly retained and the compiler can’t safely synthesize all the code required to make it work correctly. For example, if you pass a pointer to one of these structures through some code that ends up doing a free, each id would have to be released before the struct is freed. The compiler cannot reliably do this, so strong ids in structures are disallowed completely in ARC mode. There are a few possible solutions:

  1. Use Objective-C objects instead of structs.

    This is considered to be best practice anyway.

  2. If using Objective-C objects is sub-optimal, (maybe you want a dense array of these structs) then consider using a void* instead.

    This requires the use of the explicit casts, described below.

  3. Mark the object reference as __unsafe_unretained.

    This approach may be useful for the semi-common patterns like this:

    struct x { NSString *S;  int X; } StaticArray[] = {
      @"foo", 42,
      @"bar, 97,
    ...
    };

    You declare the structure as:

    struct x { __unsafe_unretained NSString *S; int X; }

    This may be problematic and is unsafe if the object could be released out from under the pointer, but it is very useful for things that are known to be around forever like constant string literals.

You can’t directly cast between id and void* (including Core Foundation types).

This is discussed in greater detail in “Managing Toll-Free Bridging”.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I think about ARC? Where does it put the retains/releases?

Try to stop thinking about where the retain/release calls are put and think about your application algorithms instead. Think about “strong and weak” pointers in your objects, about object ownership, and about possible retain cycles.

Do I still need to write dealloc methods for my objects?

Maybe.

Because ARC does not automate malloc/free, management of the lifetime of Core Foundation objects, file descriptors, and so on, you still free such resources by writing a dealloc method.

You do not have to (indeed cannot) release instance variables, but you may need to invoke [self setDelegate:nil] on system classes and other code that isn’t compiled using ARC.

dealloc methods in ARC do not require—or allow—a call to [super dealloc]; the chaining to super is handled and enforced by the runtime.

Are retain cycles still possible in ARC?

Yes.

ARC automates retain/release, and inherits the issue of retain cycles. Fortunately, code migrated to ARC rarely starts leaking, because properties already declare whether the properties are retaining or not.

How do blocks work in ARC?

Blocks “just work” when you pass blocks up the stack in ARC mode, such as in a return. You don’t have to call Block Copy any more. You still need to use [^{} copy] when passing “down” the stack into arrayWithObjects: and other methods that do a retain.

The one thing to be aware of is that __block NSString *S" is retained in ARC mode, not a possibly dangling pointer. To get the previous behavior, use __block __unsafe_unretained NSString *S or (better still) use __block __weak NSString *S.

Can I develop applications for MacOSX with ARC using Snow Leopard?

No. The Snow Leopard version of Xcode 4.2 doesn’t support ARC at all on MacOSX, because it doesn’t include the 10.7 SDK. Xcode 4.2 for Snow Leopard does support ARC for iOS though, and Xcode 4.2 for Lion supports both MacOSX and iOS. This means you need a Lion system to build an ARC application that runs on Snow Leopard.

Can I create a C array of retained pointers under ARC?

Yes, you can, as illustrated by this example:

// Note calloc() to get zero-filled memory.
__strong SomeClass **dynamicArray = (__strong SomeClass **)calloc(sizeof(SomeClass *), entries);
for (int i = 0; i < entries; i++) {
     dynamicArray[i] = [[SomeClass alloc] init];
}
 
// When you're done, set each entry to nil to tell ARC to release the object.
for (int i = 0; i < entries; i++) {
     dynamicArray[i] = nil;
}
free(dynamicArray);

There are a number of aspects to note:

  • You will need to write __strong SomeClass ** in some cases, because the default is __autoreleasing SomeClass **.

  • The allocated memory must be zero-filled.

  • You must set each element to nil before freeing the array (memset or bzero will not work).

  • You should avoid memcpy or realloc.

Is ARC slow?

It depends on what you’re measuring, but generally “no.” The compiler efficiently eliminates many extraneous retain/release calls and much effort has been invested in speeding up the Objective-C runtime in general. In particular, the common “return a retain/autoreleased object” pattern is much faster and does not actually put the object into the autorelease pool, when the caller of the method is ARC code.

One issue to be aware of is that the optimizer is not run in common debug configurations, so expect to see a lot more retain/release traffic at -O0 than at -Os.

Does ARC work in ObjC++ mode?

Yes. You can even put strong/weak ids in classes and containers. The ARC compiler synthesizes retain/release logic in copy constructors and destructors etc to make this work. One thing to be aware of is that you have to explicitly qualify some pointers with __strong, for example:

std::vector<__strong NSString*> V;

Which classes don’t support zeroing-weak references?

You cannot currently create zeroing-weak references to instances of the following classes:

NSATSTypesetter, NSColorSpace, NSFont, NSFontManager, NSFontPanel, NSImage, NSMenuView, NSParagraphStyle, NSSimpleHorizontalTypesetter, NSTableCellView, NSTextView, NSViewController, NSWindow, and NSWindowController. In addition, in OSX no classes in the AVFoundation framework support weak references.

For declared properties, you should use assign instead of weak; for variables you should use __unsafe_unretained instead of __weak.

In addition, you cannot create weak references from instances of NSHashTable, NSMapTable, or NSPointerArray under ARC.

What do I have to do when subclassing NSCell or another class that uses NSCopyObject?

Nothing special. ARC takes care of cases where you had to previously add extra retains explicitly. With ARC, all copy methods should just copy over the instance variables.

Can I opt out of ARC for specific files?

Yes.

When you migrate a project to use ARC, the -fobjc-arc compiler flag is set as the default for all Objective-C source files. You can disable ARC for a specific class using the -fno-objc-arc compiler flag for that class. In Xcode, in the target Build Phases tab, open the Compile Sources group to reveal the source file list. Double-click the file for which you want to set the flag, enter -fno-objc-arc in the pop-up panel, then click Done.

image: Art/fno-objc-arc.png

Is GC (Garbage Collection) deprecated on the Mac?

GC remains an option for development in MacOSXv10.7. You are strongly encouraged to consider ARC for new development. For existing codebases (both manual reference counting and GC), you are encouraged to “test the waters.” This is, however, a non-zero amount of work and you should weigh that effort with your other priorities.


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