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I'm a starting iOS developer and I would like to get the idea of NSMutableArray. Specifically, I want to pass NSString value from one VC to NSMutableArray, belonging to another view controller. I also want that NSMutableArray to populate UITableView on its view. Any ideas how to do this? For example, I have this action that the user triggers from within 1st view

- (IBAction)addToFav:(id)sender {  
}

And I want to pass a value of NSString myBookString to the NSMutableArray array in the 2nd view. The task is fairly simple, but I can't quite understand why you can't pass the values to NSMutableArray outside this - (void)insertObject:(id)anObject atIndex:(NSUInteger)index method mentioned in Apple's reference docs. Thanks in advance!

EDIT: My views are different VC belonging to UITabBar and to UINavigationController at the same time

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  • Can you be a little more specific in what you're asking? The documentation on NSArray and NSMutableArray is pretty good. Basically they are containers of other objects - you can add and remove what you like, and pass references around fairly freely.
    – ChrisH
    Jul 26, 2012 at 20:07
  • My answer to a question a somewhat similar question may help: stackoverflow.com/questions/11595303/…
    – ChrisH
    Jul 26, 2012 at 20:09

2 Answers 2

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You need a communication between two controllers. There are several solutions. Pick one of the following. I recommend delegate.

From http://www.hollance.com/

When you have two objects A and B, say two view controllers, that you want to make talk to each other, you can choose from the following options:

NSNotificationCenter.

  • This is anonymous one-to-many communication. Object A posts a notification to the NSNotificationCenter, which then distributes it to any other objects listening for that notification, including Object B. A and B do not have to know anything about each other, so this is a very loose coupling. Maybe a little too loose…

KVO (Key-Value Observing).

  • One object observes the properties of another. This is a very tight coupling, because Object B is now peeking directly into Object A. The advantage of KVO is that Object A doesn’t have to be aware of this at all, and therefore does not need to send out any notifications — the KVO mechanism takes care of this behind the scenes.

Direct pointers.

  • Object A has a pointer to Object B and directly sends it messages when something of interest happens. This is the tightest coupling possible because A and B cannot function without each other. In the case of view controllers you generally want to avoid this.

Delegates

  • Object B is a delegate of Object A. In this scenario, Object A does not know anything about Object B. It just knows that some object performs the role of its delegate and it will happily send messages to that delegate, but it doesn’t know — or care — that this is Object B. The delegate pattern is often the preferred way to communicate between view controllers, but it takes some work to set up.

Blocks.

  • Essentially the same approach as delegates, except that Object B now gives Object A one or more blocks (closures) to be executed when certain events take place. There is no formal delegate protocol and the only thing that Object A sees of Object B is the blocks it is given.
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  • There are more than just those. Segues can be used to transfer the data transparently, if using storyboard, as well as IB linking, or even bindings. In the end, however, it comes down to preference, and not much more. Jul 26, 2012 at 20:22
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NSMutableArray is just that, a standard mutable array implementation. It has all of the functionality you would expect from one in any other language/framework. docs.

What is the problem with the way adding elements to an array works? You can also just do [array addObject:object] if you don't mind adding it to the tail.

To answer the rest of your question, there are many ways to transfer data from one controller to another. How is your navigation set up? Are you using a UITabBarController, or a UINavigationController? How are the views related to each other? If they are nested, you can pass data directly from one to another. If not, you could use something like your app delegate to hold the data and pass it around.

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  • Check out my edit. I understand what you are saying about [array addObject:object], it sounds pretty nice. Jul 26, 2012 at 20:18

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