My findings below no longer seem to be true. I've re-run the tests on iOS 8 and iOS 9 and the completion block of an operation always runs concurrently with the next operation. Currently, I don't see a way to make an operation wait for the previous completion block to finish.
I just tried this scenario in a sample project. Here is the result:
If the NSOperationQueue
's maxConcurrentOperationCount
is set to 1, an NSOperation
's completionBlock
and the next NSOperation
in the queue run simultaneously.
But, if every NSOperation
is linked to its previous operation by calling addDependency:
, the execution of an operation waits until the previous operation's completionBlock
has finished.
So, if you want to cancel the next operation in the completionBlock
of the current operation and be sure that it is cancelled before it is started, you have to set dependencies between the NSOperations
by calling addDependency:
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