vote up 3 vote down star

Since upgrading to the latest XCode 3.2.1 and SnowLeopard, I've been getting the warning,

"format not a string literal and no format arguments"

on the following:

NSError *error = nil;

if (![self.managedObjectContext save:&error]) 
{
    NSLog([NSString stringWithFormat:@"%@ %@, %@", 
       errorMsgFormat, 
       error, 
       [error userInfo]]);		

}

If 'errorMsgFormat' is an NSString with format specifiers (eg: "print me like this: %@"), what is wrong with the above NSLog statement? And what is the recommended way to fix it so that the warning isn't generated?

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I've been wondering this too. – nall Nov 5 at 1:54

6 Answers

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Are you nesting your brackets correctly? I don't think NSLog() likes taking only one argument, which is what you're passing it. Also, it already does the formatting for you. Why not just do this?

NSLog(@"%@ %@, %@", 
   errorMsgFormat, 
   error, 
   [error userInfo]);

Or, since you say errorMsgFormat is a format string with a single placeholder, are you trying to do this?

NSLog(@"%@, %@", [NSString stringWithFormat:errorMsgFormat, error], 
   [error userInfo]);
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vote up 0 vote down

THANKS! IT WORKED WITH

"Typecheck Calls to printf/scanf" (GCC_WARN_TYPECHECK_CALLS_TO_PRINTF = NO)

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vote up 0 vote down

If you want get rid of the warning "format not a string literal and no format arguments" once and for all, you can disable the GCC warning setting "Typecheck Calls to printf/scanf" (GCC_WARN_TYPECHECK_CALLS_TO_PRINTF = NO) in your target's build settings.

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That will silence the warning, but it won't do anything to fix the underlying flaw within your application. By silencing the warning you're ignoring a potential bug that could crash your application based simply on the data entered by the user (or in this case the error message generated by CoreData). It would be better to follow some of the other answers within this question to remove the bug within the source code that is causing the warning to appear. – Christopher Fairbairn Dec 11 at 2:18
True... That's why I posted "get rid of the warning" instead of "solve". – aldi Dec 14 at 11:59
vote up 6 vote down

Xcode is complaining because this is a security problem.

Here's code similar to yours:

NSString *nameFormat = @"%@ %@";
NSString *firstName = @"Jon";
NSString *lastName = @"Hess %@";
NSString *name = [NSString stringWithFormat:nameFormat, firstName, lastName];
NSLog(name);

That last NSLog statement is going to be executing the equivalent of this:

NSLog(@"Jon Hess %@");

That's going to cause NSLog to look for one more string argument, but there isn't one. Because of the way the C language works, it's going to pick up some random garbage pointer from the stack and try to treat it like an NSString. This will most likely crash your program. Now your strings probably don't have %@'s in them, but some day they might. You should always use a format string with data you explicitly control as the first argument to functions that take format strings (printf, scanf, NSLog, -[NSString stringWithFormat:], ...).

As Otto points out, you should probably just do something like:

NSLog(errorMsgFormat, error, [error userInfo]);
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vote up 0 vote down

NSLog() expects a format string, what is getting passed in is just a string. You do not need to use stringWithFormat:, you can just do:

NSLog(@"%@ %@, %@", errorMsgFormat, error, [error userInfo])

And that would make the warning go away.

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vote up 0 vote down

Quickest way to fix it would be to add @"%@", as the first argument to your NSLog call, i.e.,

NSLog(@"%@", [NSString stringWithFormat: ....]);

Though, you should probably consider Sixteen Otto's answer.

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