1

try to compare a field returned by web-service and which contains only either the String true or false (YES, it's STRING and not boolean), so i try to compare it with another string like this :

if ([withOptions isEqualToString:@"true"]) {
               annotation.stationLavage=@"with";
           }else {
               annotation.stationLavage=@"without";
           }

so when withOptions string contains the "true" string, all is ok, and when it contains the "false" string i got this exception in the log :

Terminating app due to uncaught exception 'NSInvalidArgumentException', reason: '-[NSNull isEqualToString:]: unrecognized selector sent to instance 0x2984d68'

i am pretty sure that in all cases, withOptions contains a string value (either "true" or "false") and it never contains NULL.

4
  • 2
    You shouldn't be so sure that withOptions is always a string. withOptions is an instance of NSNull when this error is thrown. There are two possible reasons: you're retrieving withOptions from a method that may return +[NSNull null], e.g. to indicate not found, or you've corrupted memory and all bets are off.
    – Barry Wark
    May 11, 2011 at 14:31
  • Hi, could you please explain me your second reason ? thx
    – Luca
    May 11, 2011 at 14:34
  • It would mean that you over-released an object somewhere and a new object was allocated at the same address (an object of a different type). That can't be what is happening, though, since +null returns a singleton that is allocated very early in the app lifecycle. Barry's first reason is most likely it.
    – bbum
    May 11, 2011 at 15:13
  • It's a long shot, but could memory corruption (e.g. an old-school C-style array overrun) write the address of the NSNull class to the isa of withOptions?
    – Barry Wark
    May 11, 2011 at 17:07

3 Answers 3

3

i am pretty sure that in all cases, withOptions contains a string value (either "true" or "false") and it never contains NULL.

Clearly, that assumption is wrong. :)

On the line before that if() statement, add NSLog(@"%@ - %@", withOptions, [withOptions class]);

Not that NSNull and NULL are not the same thing; NSNull is a class whose singleton instance represents "no value" in containers (and other things) that don't accept nil as values.

When that crash occurs, withOptions is referring to an instance of NSNull.

3
  • Hi , i have already think about it and i test the class of the String withOptionsand in the log i got NSCFString, that's why i would think about Barry's second reason :)
    – Luca
    May 11, 2011 at 15:30
  • It would be impossible for withOptions to be of type NSCFString on the line before the if() statement and then crash in the if() statement because it turned into an NSNull. It still may be memory corruption, but the bottom line is that withOptions contains a reference to an NSNull if that if() statement is where the actual crash occurred.
    – bbum
    May 11, 2011 at 16:28
  • Hi, i try to trach the error and i found that the problem may not came from the isEqual function, please see my new post here, i have explained my problem, thx in advance : stackoverflow.com/questions/5970981/…
    – Luca
    May 11, 2011 at 21:46
0

This is my code, easy for understand.

if ([[info objectForKey:@"address"] isKindOfClass:[NSNull class]]) {
            dto.address    =   @"Unknown";
}
0

If you want to do a safe comparaison and your are not 100% that your "withOption" contains a string , because it could be null for instance (the case where no option has been given) you could do this:

if ([@"true" isEqualToString:withAnnotation]) {
     annotation.stationLavage=@"with";
 }else {
     annotation.stationLavage=@"without";
 }

Note that you can even shorten the comparaison:

annotation.stationLavage=[@"true" isEqualToString:withAnnotation]?@"with":@"without";

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