4

Disclaimer: limited knowledge of Objective-C (passing curiosity).

if (@YES)

vs

if (YES)

What's the difference?

From what I understand, @YES is a bool object literal, and YES is a macro that expands to 1? Is this correct? If so, why use @YES instead of YES or vice versa?

3 Answers 3

6

@YES is a shortcut for [NSNumber numberWithBool:YES], so this:

if (@YES)

actually means

if ([NSNumber numberWithBool:YES] != nil)

Note, that it doesn't matter what number (or bool value) that is. You just test that it's a valid object. Even @NO will evaulate to YES if you test it like that, because it's a non-nil NSNumber instance:

if (@NO) NSLog(@"test");

Output:

2013-12-07 21:02:49.828 MyApp[37512:70b] test

Long story short: Don't use @YES or @NO like that, they will not behave as you would expect.

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  • 1
    @Aristides: No, but @YES, @NO, YES and 1 are all non-zero, and that is what counts in the if-expression.
    – Martin R
    Dec 7, 2013 at 20:08
  • @Aristides if (@NO) is different from if (NO). The former is testing whether [NSNumber numberWithBool:NO] returns a valid object (it does). The latter is actually testing if the value is false. Dec 7, 2013 at 20:08
  • That's what I meant. if (@literal) then simply tests if it returns an object (which in any case it would, right) while if (NO) becomes if (0) and therefore the actual intended test?
    – Aristides
    Dec 7, 2013 at 20:09
1

The @ symbol is a recent addition to Objective-C, which changes literals into their object representation in the form of an NSNumber instance.

This is especially useful if you need to store literals in arrays and dictionaries, which can only store objects (type id).

The way you use it, there is not need to create an object for the literal, so you should just use the literal directly.

The @ symbol has always been used for denoting NSString objects, and only 2-3 years ago this syntax was extended for literals and expressions.

3
  • I know you meant something different, but The @ symbol is a recent addition to Objective-C is kind of funny. @ is as old as Objective-C. Dec 7, 2013 at 21:48
  • @GabrielePetronella I know you meant something different, but @ is as old as Objective-C is kind of funny. @ is more than 500 years old.
    – DrummerB
    Dec 7, 2013 at 22:50
  • @GabrielePetronella :)
    – Joost
    Dec 8, 2013 at 14:31
1

@YES, @1, @1.5...these are all literal syntax that are the equivalent of an NSNumber ie: [NSNumber numberWithBool:YES], [NSNumber numberWithInt:1], [NSNumber numberWithDouble:1.5]. Using this means you are creating an NSNumber object.

YES is simply the BOOL type, it's a primitive type in Obj-C, not an object like NSNumber. The BOOL type is used in Objective-C to hold true or false values. This is what you would normally use. You would only use @YES in cases where you need to hold the primitives in something that only accepts objects, perhaps if you wanted to hold them in an NSArray for example.

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