0

In objective C, what is a better way of doing this:

if ([response class] == [nil class])

response is either a NSDictionary or NSMutableDictionary

The code is working but I'm getting a "Invalid receiver type 'void *' or "comparison of distinct Objective-C types 'Class' and 'struct NSMutableDictionary *' lacks a cast" warning messages

Thanks

3 Answers 3

6

If you're actually looking to test [response class], instead of the value of response itself, you'll want to use

if ([response isKindOfClass:[NSNull class])

If you're looking to check if response itself is nil, I describe a nice way of doing this in this answer to a similar question.

1
  • It turns out hat I need to check if response itself was nil. Thanks
    – Dave
    Dec 6, 2010 at 4:20
3

An object's class can't be nil unless you've botched some runtime swizzling. All valid objects must be instances of a valid class. Are you trying to do something like the following?

 if (!response) {
    // 'response' is nil
 } else if ([response isKindOfClass:[NSMutableDictionary class]]) {
    // response is an NSMutableDictionary
 } else if ([response isKindOfClass:[NSDictionary class]]) {
    // response is an NSDictionary
    // (or an NSMutableDictionary if you remove the above 'if')
 }
1
  • The isKindOfClass: and isa stuff is right. The rest won't work; all dictionaries are an instance of NSCFDictionary (or other private class) that are subclasses of NSMutableDictionary. There is no way to differentiate between mutable and immutable dictionaries (very much on purpose).
    – bbum
    Dec 5, 2010 at 22:09
2

Since you mentioned either NSDictionary or NSMutableDictionary and appear to be testing for an instances kind...

isKindOfClass: will identify whether or not the receiver is an instance of the class specified. This includes subclasses.

Note that you cannot use this to determine if a dictionary is mutable or immutable, though, as dictionaries are instances of NSCFDictionary which is a subclass of `NSMutableDictionary.

This is very much on purpose.

2
  • Interesting. I can imagine that being a PITA in some cases. Dec 5, 2010 at 22:14
  • Much less of a PITA than code that conditionalizes on mutability vs. immutability; it means tons of [NSDictionary dictionaryWithDictionary: mutableDict] inefficiencies, for a start.
    – bbum
    Dec 6, 2010 at 1:52

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.