As a generalization: Just stick with POD types until you need to use an object based representation, such as NSNumber
. The performance is much better with the PODs, but you'll need NSNumber
in some cases.
In some cases, it may make sense to use NSNumber
instead -- this is typically when you reuse a NSNumber
often -- this is to avoid making a ton of duplicate NSNumber
s. Such occurrences are practical only rarely beyond serialization and generic objc interfaces (bindings, transformers, dictionaries).
Update/Details: The ObjC runtime will in some cases, on some architectures, and on some OS versions substitute a tagged pointer representing NSNumber
s of specific type and domain. Although the internal representation has changed since originally written a few years back, here is a good introduction to the subject: http://objectivistc.tumblr.com/post/7872364181/tagged-pointers-and-fast-pathed-cfnumber-integers-in. Where this can be used, it saves you from slow operations like allocations, locking, and ref count ops. Nevertheless, tagged pointers are incapable of representing every number and it introduces overhead, so you should still favor basic builtins over NSNumber
as a default. Tagged pointers are a great optimization where applicable, but are far from competing with the builtins when you just need a number.
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