I am new to Objective-C and I need to have a string like "abc\123"
To have this I have tried doing:-
NSString *first = #"abc\\"; //Should escape
NSString *second= #"123";
NSString *combined= [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%#%#", first, second]; //which should give abc\123
But I get an output as "abc\\123".
I am really stuck on this one. Any help is appreciated
Backslash itself is the escape character so needs character to read ahead, you need to escape it.
This results same output you like.
NSString *first = #"abc\\";
You can check just by adding one more backshash #"abc\\\" gives you missing character "" runtime error.
NSString *first = #"abc\\"; // log results abc\
NSString *first = #"abc\\\\"; // log results abc\\
Can do by adding between format specifiers by following same backslash rule.
NSString *combined= [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%#\\%#", first, second];
It's the output issue, in fact, the string is correct.
let array = ["abc", "123"]
let separator = "\\"
separator.characters.count //count=1
let x = array.joined(separator: "\\")
x.characters.count //count = 7
You can use
stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString:withString:
So in your case
NSString *first = #"abc\\"; //Should escape
NSString *second= #"123";
NSString *first = [first stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString:#"\\" withString:#"\"];
NSString *combined= [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%#%#", first, second];
So your result will be abc\123
Related
I have float like 3500,435232123. All I want to know if exists (in Objective C) a function that let me keep just the last 4 digits in my case is 2123.
You can use NSNumberFormatter
NSNumberFormatter *format = [[NSNumberFormatter alloc]init];
[format setNumberStyle:NSNumberFormatterDecimalStyle];
[format setRoundingMode:NSNumberFormatterRoundHalfUp];
[format setMaximumFractionDigits:4];
[format setMinimumFractionDigits:4];
string = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%#",[format stringFromNumber:[NSNumber numberWithFloat:65.50055]] ;
Or simply
NSString *string = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%.04f", floatValue];
If you want only last four digits, convert the float to a string
NSString *string = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%f", floatValue];
and get the last four characters
NSString *lastFour = [string substringFromIndex: [string length] - 4];
It you want to get the decimal part, you can do x - floor(x). For instance:
float x = 3500,435232123;
NSString *string = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%.04f", x - floor(x)];
And to get 4 decimal digits do what Fawad Masud says.
No there is no such function, as far as i know. But here is a way to achieve exactly what you want.
First you have to round it to four digits after point:
NSString *exampleString = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%.04f", valueToRound];
Then you get the location for the comma inside the exampleString:
NSRange commaRange = [valueString rangeOfString:#","];
Finally you create the finalString with the values from that NSRange. The substring starts at commaRange.location+commaRange.lengthbecause thats the index directly after the comma.
NSString *finalString = [valueString substringWithRange:NSMakeRange(commaRange.location+commaRange.length,valueString.length-commaRange.location-commaRange.length)];
Hope that helps you.
I think is no predefined function for that.
and the solution i thought of is:
float floatNum = 3500.435232123;
converting float number to string and trim/substring the string, like for example:
NSString *stringFloat = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%f", floatNum];
NSString *newString = [stringFloat substringWithRange:NSMakeRange(stringFloat.length - 4, stringFloat.length)];
NSLog(#"%#", newString);
another is something like:
NSString *stringFloat = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%f", floatNum];
//separates the floating number to
arr[0] = whole number
arr[1] = decimals
NSArray *arr=[str componentsSeparatedByString:#"."];
since you just want to work on the decimal, i think arr[1] is what you need..
NSString *stringDecimals = (NSString *)arr[1];
if ( stringDecimals.length > 4) //check the length of the decimals then cut if exceeds 4 character..
{
stringDecimals = [stringDecimals substringWithRange:NSMakeRange(stringDecimals.length - 4, stringDecimals.length)];
}
NSLog(#"stringDecimals: %#", stringDecimals);
I need to concatenate a string and a variable together - I kind of find lots of examples of adding a string prior to a variable but not the other way round - how do I do this?
NSString *theImage = [[self.detailItem valueForKey:#" resimagefiletitle"] description], #"'add on the end";
Something like this:
NSString *theImage = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%# %#",[self.detailItem valueForKey:#" resimagefiletitle"], #"'add on the end"];
Or:
NSString *theImage = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%# add on the end",[self.detailItem valueForKey:#" resimagefiletitle"]];
Try this
NSString *theImage = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%# '>",[[self.detailItem valueForKey:#"resimagefiletitle"] description]];
Here I am considering [[self.detailItem valueForKey:#"resimagefiletitle"] description] gives NSString
We can concat diffrent type of datatypes into string by mention the format for it.
like if your want to concat two or more strings together then you can use the following code:
NSString *NewString = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%#%#",#"This Is",#"way to concate string"];
and if your want concat integer value then you can mention the data format for it "%i".
eg:
int OutOf = 150;
NSString *NewString = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%#%i",#"I got 100 out of ",OutOf];
this may help you.
In my app, I have a view where user have to fill a form. But, sometime the app crash here, in this function, that simple cacth the value field and built a url to give
-(NSString*)urlToUpload{
NSString *string1 =[[NSString alloc]init];
string1= [NSString stringWithFormat:#"?nombre="];
NSString *string2 = [string1 stringByAppendingString:nameAdded];
//crash here
NSString *string3 = [string2 stringByAppendingString:#"&horario="];
NSString *string4 = [string3 stringByAppendingString:horarioAdded];
NSString *string5 = [string4 stringByAppendingString:#"&info="];
NSString *string6 = [string5 stringByAppendingString:infoAdded];
NSString *string7 = [string6 stringByAppendingString:#"&offerta="];
NSString *string8 = [string7 stringByAppendingString:offertaAdded];
NSString *lat_string = [[[NSString alloc] initWithFormat:#"%f",locationToUpload2.latitude] autorelease];
NSString *lon_string = [[[NSString alloc] initWithFormat:#"%f",locationToUpload2.longitude] autorelease];
NSString *string9 = [string8 stringByAppendingString:#"&latitude="];
NSString *string10 = [string9 stringByAppendingString:lat_string];
NSString *string11 = [string10 stringByAppendingString:#"&longitude="];
NSString *string12 = [string11 stringByAppendingString:lon_string];
NSString *url1 = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"http://myserverside/mysql_up.php"];
NSString *url = [url1 stringByAppendingString:string12];
return url;
}
EDIT:
It seems problem appers on nameAdded when there is a white space into textField(i.e. MisterB not crash, Mister B yes ).
But I am using:
nameAdded =[[nameField.text stringByTrimmingCharactersInSet:[NSCharacterSet whitespaceAndNewlineCharacterSet]] stringByAddingPercentEscapesUsingEncoding:NSUTF8StringEncoding];
and NSLOg give of nameAdded is Mister%20B.
The crash still appearing...
Just use a single stringWithFormat::
- (NSString *)urlToUpload {
NSString *url = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"http://myserverside/mysql_up.php?nombre=%#&horario=%#&info=%#&offerta=%#&latitude=%f&longitude=%f",
[nameAdded stringByAddingPercentEscapesUsingEncoding:NSUTF8StringEncoding],
[horarioAdded stringByAddingPercentEscapesUsingEncoding:NSUTF8StringEncoding],
[infoAdded stringByAddingPercentEscapesUsingEncoding:NSUTF8StringEncoding],
[offertaAdded stringByAddingPercentEscapesUsingEncoding:NSUTF8StringEncoding],
locationToUpload2.latitude, locationToUpload2.longitude];
return url;
}
Make sure the referenced variables are valid.
In your original code there is no need to alloc/init an NSString then assign another string to the same variable. That's a memory leak (string1).
If you really want to structure your code the way you have it, at least use an NSMutableString and append to that one mutable string. Creating over a dozen NSString variables is the wrong way to do it.
Updated: Ensure each of the strings added to the URL are properly escaped.
It looks like nameAdded may be the cause of your problems. Is it nil at that point?
Also
You are allocating a string, setting it to string1 and then immediately setting string1 to the class function stringWithFormat which allocates another string. Also you are using stringWithFormat but you aren't using any format so you could simply use NSString *string1 = #"?nombre=";
Rather than declaring all of those variables you should just use NSMutableString and build it all in one variabl
Hello everyone I am trying find a string inside a string
lets say I have a string:
word1/word2/word3
I want to find the word from the end of the string to the last "/"
so what I will get from that string is:
Word3
How do I do that?
Thanks!
You are looking for the componentsSeparatedByString: method
NSString *originalString = #"word1/word2/word3";
NSArray *separatedArray = [originalString componentsSeparatedByString:#"/"];
NSString *lastObject = [separatedArray lastObject]; //word3
once check this one By using this one you'l get last pathcomponent values,
NSString* theFileName = #"how /are / you ";
NSString *str1=[theFileName lastPathComponent];
NSLog(#"%#",str1);
By using lastPathComponent you'l get the last path component directly no need to take array for separate the string.
you must use NSScanner class to split substring.
check this.
Objective C: How to extract part of a String (e.g. start with '#')
NSString *string = #"word1/word2/word3"
NSArray *arr = [string componentsSeperatedByString:#"/"];
NSSting *str = [arr lastObject];
You can find it also with this way:
NSMutableString *string=[NSMutableString stringWithString:#"word1/word2/word3"];
NSRange range=[string rangeOfString:#"/" options:NSBackwardsSearch];
NSString *subString=[string substringFromIndex:range.location+1];
NSRegularExpression or NSString rangeOfString:options:range:locale: (with options to search backwards).
The answer really depends on exactly what the input string will contain (how consistent it is).
I've got a string that shows the stock amount using "-" as separators.
It's built up like this: localStock-wareHouseStock-supplierStock
Now I want to update the supplierStock at the end of the string, but as you can see in the code below it goes wrong when the original string returns more than a single-space value (such as 20).
Is there a way to remove all characters until the last "-" (or remove characters after the second "-")?
NSMutableString *string1 = [NSMutableString stringWithString: p1.colorStock];
NSLog(#"string1: %#",string1);
NSString *newString = [string1 substringToIndex:[string1 length]-2];
NSLog(#"newString: %#",newString);
NSString *colorStock = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%#-%#",newString,p2.supplierStock];
NSLog(#"colorstock: %#",colorStock);
p1.colorStock = colorStock;
NSLog1
string1: 0-0-0
newString: 0-0
colorstock: 0-0-20
NSLog2
string1: 0-0-20
newString: 0-0-
colorstock: 0-0--20
EDIT: Got it working thanks to Srikar!
NSString *string1 = [NSString stringWithString: p1.colorStock];
NSLog(#"string1: %#",string1);
NSString *finalString = [string1 stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString:[[string1 componentsSeparatedByString:#"-"] lastObject] withString:p2.supplierStock.stringValue];
NSLog(#"finalString: %#",finalString);
p1.colorStock = finalString;
Why not use componentsSeparatedByString followed by lastObject ?
NSString *supplierStock = [[string1 componentsSeparatedByString:#"-"] lastObject];
The above works if the "stock amount" is always in sets of 3's separated by a "-". Also since you always want supplierStock, lastObject is perfect for your needs.
Of course after splitting string1 with - you get a NSArray instance and you can access the individual components using objectAtIndex:index. So if you want localStock you can get by
NSString *localStock = [[string1 componentsSeparatedByString:#"-"] objectAtIndex:0];
I would suggest splitting the string into the 3 parts using [NSString componentsSeparatedByString:#"-"] and then building it back up again:
NSArray *components = [p1.colorStock componentsSeparatedByString:#"-"];
p1.colorStock = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%#-%#-%#",
[components objectAtIndex:0],
[components objectAtIndex:1],
p2.supplierStock];
With a string that looks like
NSString *myString = #"Hello-World";
you can separate it with the componentsSeparatedByString: method of the NSString object as
NSArray *myWords = [myString componentsSeparatedByString:#"-"];
The myWords - array will then contain the two NSString objects Hello and World.
To access the strings:
NSString *theHelloString = [myWords objectAtIndex:0];
NSString *theWorldString = [myWords objectAtIndex:1];
Hope it helps!
None of these examples show how to do this if you are unaware of how many of these separator occurrences you're going to have in the original string.
Here's what I believe the correct the correct code should be for dismantling the original string and rebuilding it until you reach the final separator, regardless of how many separators it contains.
NSString *seperator = #" ";
NSString *everythingBeforeLastSeperator;
NSArray *stringComponents = [originalString componentsSeparatedByString:seperator];
if (stringComponents.count!=0) {
everythingBeforeLastSeperator = [stringComponents objectAtIndex:0];
for (int a = 1 ; a < (stringComponents.count - 1) ; a++) {
everythingBeforeLastSeperator = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%#%#%#", everythingBeforeLastSeperator, seperator, [stringComponents objectAtIndex:a]];
}
}
return everythingBeforeLastSeperator;