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I have an object Student with 4 attributes(age,name,department,surname). and I create an array of that object like this;

Student students[10] blah blah init blah.

then i want to use an Student array as argument for a method;

-(void) displayStudentInArray : (????) studentarray atIndex: (int) index {.....}

'???' are my problem. what do i write there? i ve no idea.

need help. i m new on objective c.

4 Answers 4

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Rather than using C notation the array should be made like this:

NSArray *studentArray = [[NSArray alloc] initWithObjects: student1, student2, student2, ..., nil];

In which case the parameter type will be NSArray

-(void) displayStudentInArray : (NSArray *)studentarray atIndex: (int) index {.....}
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  • then how can i access in displayStudentInArray method, student2's name or attribute.
    – makin11
    Jun 21, 2012 at 23:14
  • Student studentTwo = [studentArray objectAtIndex:1]; or in general Student chosenStudent = [studentArray objectAtIndex:index]; also, in the new SDK's you may use studentArray[index]
    – matt3141
    Jun 21, 2012 at 23:28
  • -(void) displayStudentInArray:(Student **) studentarray.... then i get bad access on next line in that method Student *studentTwo = studentarray[index]; ??
    – makin11
    Jun 22, 2012 at 15:58
  • @makin11 I had suggested you use Objective C notation, I don't see a benefit of doing otherwise.
    – matt3141
    Jun 22, 2012 at 16:19
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The preferred method for creating arrays is using NSArray (or NSMutableArray if you want to modify the array after it is created):

NSArray *array = [[NSArray alloc]initWithObjects:student1, student2...];

Then your method signature would be:

-(void)displayStudentInArray:(NSArray *)studentarray atIndex:(int)index
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These answers are correct, but if you really want to use C notation, you just need to add another asterisk to denote a reference to another pointer:

- (void)displayStudentInArray:(Student**)studentArray atIndex:(int)index {
    Student* firstStudent = studentArray[1];
    //do what you want with the array
}

This is because C arrays are really just pointers to an address in memory. If you wanted a C array for a primitive, it would look like this:

int* arrayOfInts = malloc(yourSize * sizeof(int));

You have an array of objects, but the idea is just the same. You just add one more asterisk to denote that it's a pointer to a pointer to an object.

Student** students = ...
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Just write

Student *tempStudent = (array)[0];

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