Edit: My previous answer was likely wrong.
Some selected excerpts from the ARC docs say:
3. Retainable object pointers
A retainable object pointer (or retainable pointer) is a value of a retainable object pointer type (retainable type). There are three kinds of retainable object pointer types:
- block pointers (formed by applying the caret (^) declarator sigil to a function type)
4.2. Semantics
Assignment occurs when evaluating an assignment operator. The semantics vary based on the qualification:
- For __strong objects, the new pointee is first retained; second, the lvalue is loaded with primitive semantics; third, the new pointee is stored into the lvalue with primitive semantics; and finally, the old pointee is released. This is not performed atomically; external synchronization must be used to make this safe in the face of concurrent loads and stores.
4.4.1. Objects
If an object is declared with retainable object owner type, but without an explicit ownership qualifier, its type is implicitly adjusted to have __strong qualification.
7.5. Blocks
With the exception of retains done as part of initializing a __strong parameter variable or reading a __weak variable, whenever these semantics call for retaining a value of block-pointer type, it has the effect of a Block_copy. The optimizer may remove such copies when it sees that the result is used only as an argument to a call.
So I think the answer is maybe, depending on the optimizer.
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