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I'm trying to insert an NSNumber as a float value, into an NSArray, containing the floatValue from another NSNumber. I'm able to create the array fine, but when I access the object, it appears to only be an integer? I would expect that [NSNumber numberWithFloat:n] would generate a normal NSNumber with a float value..

int myInteger = 3;
NSNumber *myNum = [NSNumber numberWithInt:myInteger];
NSArray *arr = [NSArray arrayWithObjects:[NSNumber numberWithFloat:[myNum floatValue]], nil];
NSLog(@"%@", [arr objectAtIndex:0]);

Output:

2012-01-09 16:39:32.664 ObjectiveCSandbox[2961:707] 3

Additionally, I am able to use the %i pointer fine, and when I try and use the %f pointer in NSLog, the app crashes completely. What is going on here? This question is more academic than anything.

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  • Just a note: if you're creating a one-object array, you can/should use arrayWithObject: instead of arrayWithObject**s**:.
    – jscs
    Jan 9, 2012 at 21:55
  • Note that if yu have an NSNumber with the correct value in it (as an integer), there is no point in creating a second instance with the floating point representation and, for very large values, doing so might lose precision (if I remember my floating point representation info correctly).
    – bbum
    Jan 9, 2012 at 22:38

2 Answers 2

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The default print behavior for NSNumber will trim off any leading zeros. So even if the underlying value is a float, if there's no actual non-zero floating-point numbers, it'll print like its an integer.

As for your second question, using both %i and %f is incorrect in your log statement, since you're logging an object. You could use %p to log the pointer value of the object, if you wanted, but I don't think that's useful to you at the moment. If you want to use %f to get printf's default float-printing behavior then you need to actually pass it a float instead of an object, as in NSLog(@"%f", [[arr objectAtIndex:0] floatValue]).

If all you're really interested in is whether the NSNumber is storing a float internally, then you can print out the results of the -objcType method, which will give you the @encode-string for the underlying value, but I'm not sure why you care what particular underlying format NSNumber uses to store your value, as long as it can return you the value in your desired format (e.g. by calling -floatValue).

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  • Thanks Kevin, using the %f and floatValue was what I was missing.
    – mccrackend
    Jan 10, 2012 at 21:15
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Try this for the last line:

NSLog(@"%f", [[arr objectAtIndex:0] floatValue]);
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