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In my app there is a mechanism that requires that at a certain point two NSStrings will be the same to do something; for some reason when I compare the two, even when they are the same, it still doesn't recognize that. The code is something like this:

NSString * aString = [self someMethodThatGetsAString];

NSString * bString;

BOOL areStringsTheSame = NO;

while (areStringsTheSame != YES) {

       bString = [self someMethodThatTakesNSStringsFromAnArrey];
       if (bString == aString) {
             areStringsTheSame = YES;
       { }

I even inserted an NSLog() and made sure that at a certain point they were the same (and as far as I know this is what == stands for...), but still it didn't get into the if to change the BOOL value.

Is there another way to do this comparison? Am I missing something?

3 Answers 3

85

You can use the method isEqualToString::

if ([bString isEqualToString:aString])

== compares the references (addresses of) the strings, and not the value of the strings.

2
  • 2
    True. And dig into the principles of OOP (two objects with the same properties are not necessarily the same objects). Otherwise, you're gonna encounter this problem every day of your developer life :-)
    – vstrien
    Aug 6, 2011 at 21:49
  • Apparently == works just as well to compare strings case-sensitively, because of the way Objective-C uses string variables. For example, declare a string A and string B, and do == and you'll find they are both stored in the same address. Aug 20, 2015 at 15:50
5

This approach worked for me:

if ([firstString compare:secondString] == NSOrderedSame) {
    //Do something when they are the same
} else {
    //Do something when they are different
}
1
  • I found today, this returns NSOrderedSame if one is nil and one isn't Mar 8, 2021 at 15:24
4

Recently I was shocked by the fact that two NSStrings that resemble each other on NSLog may be different. It is because sometimes NSString can contain a zero width space character. Be aware of that and consider:

#define ZERO_WIDTH_SPACE_STRING @"\u200B"

To conquer this you should clean your string from zero width white space characters before comparing:

NSMutableString *eMailToAdd = [NSMutableString string];

NSMutableCharacterSet *charSet = [[NSCharacterSet whitespaceCharacterSet] mutableCopy];
    //[charSet formUnionWithCharacterSet:[NSCharacterSet punctuationCharacterSet]];

    NSString *rawStr = [[tokenField textField] text];
    for (int i = 0; i < [rawStr length]; i++)
    {
        if (![charSet characterIsMember:[rawStr characterAtIndex:i]])
        {
            [eMailToAdd appendFormat:@"%@",[NSString stringWithFormat:@"%c", [rawStr characterAtIndex:i]]];
        }
    }

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