0

Why does it have a "Return makes pointer from integer without a cast" warning?

I have a "Person" object that contains an NSString and an int.

-(id)tableView:(NSTableView *)tableView objectValueForTableColumn:(NSTableColumn *)tableColumn row:(NSInteger)row
{
Person *thePerson = [theList objectAtIndex:row];
if (tableColumn == nameTableColumn)
    {
        return thePerson.theName;
    }
    else if (tableColumn == ageTableColumn)
    {
        return thePerson.theAge;
    }
    else
         return nil;
}

For some kind of reason, the Age instance variable gets a warning about pointers. It's weird and I want to know why.

0

2 Answers 2

1

id is the type for a generic object, and is actually a pointer (even though you don't have to declare it with the '*'). int isn't an object, and so you get the warning. If you want to use this method, you could try wrapping it in an NSNumber:

-(id)tableView:(NSTableView *)tableView objectValueForTableColumn:(NSTableColumn *)tableColumn row:(NSInteger)row
{
Person *thePerson = [theList objectAtIndex:row];
if (tableColumn == nameTableColumn)
    {
        return thePerson.theName;
    }
    else if (tableColumn == ageTableColumn)
    {
        return [NSNumber numberWithInt:thePerson.theAge];
    }
    else
         return nil;
}
0

int is a value type, but id corresponds to an arbitrary Objective-C pointer type.

You can wrap the int in an NSNumber and return that:

return [NSNumber numberWithInt:thePerson.theAge];

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.