Use the userInfo field! That's what it's for!
An ASIHTTPRequest (or an ASIFormDataRequest) object has a property called .userInfo that can take an NSDictionary with anything in it you want. So I pretty much always go:
- (void) viewDidLoad { // or wherever
ASIHTTPRequest *req = [ASIHTTPRequest requestWithUrl:theUrl];
req.delegate = self;
req.userInfo = [NSDictionary dictionaryWithObject:@"initialRequest" forKey:@"type"];
[req startAsynchronous];
}
- (void)requestFinished:(ASIHTTPRequest *)request
{
if ([[request.userInfo valueForKey:@"type"] isEqualToString:@"initialRequest"]) {
// I know it's my "initialRequest" .req and not some other one!
// In here I might parse my JSON that the server replied with,
// assemble image URLs, and request them, with a userInfo
// field containing a dictionary with @"image" for the @"type", for instance.
}
}
Set a different value for the object at key @"type"
in each different ASIHTTPRequest you do in this view controller, and you can now distinguish between them in -requestFinished:
and handle each of them appropriately.
If you're really fancy, you can carry along any other data that would be useful when the request finishes. For instance, if you're lazy-loading images, you can pass yourself a handle to the UIImageView that you want to populate, and then do that in -requestFinished
after you've loaded the image data!