I tried something along the lines of:
if(myString != nil && myString.length) { ... }
And got:
-[NSNull length]: unrecognized selector sent to instance
Does Objective-C not short-circuit after the first condition fails?
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I tried something along the lines of:
And got: -[NSNull length]: unrecognized selector sent to instance Does Objective-C not short-circuit after the first condition fails? |
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Objective-C does support short-circuit evaluation, just like C. It seems that in your example NSNull is a singleton and is used to represent Btw, normally, people write |
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Objective-C is a strict superset of C. Because C supports short-circuit evaluation, Objective-C does as well. |
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What is NSNull defined as? If it is an object that is supposed to represent nothing, than it would not be nil. in other words, NSNull and nil aren't the same. |
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If you have an NSNull somewhere, you are probably either using a JSON parser or CoreData. When a number in CoreData is not set, CoreData will give you back NSNull - possibly the same goes for NSString values in CoreData too. Similarly, you can have empty elements in JSON returned from a server and some parsers will give you that as an NSNull object. So in both cases, you have to be careful when you are using values since the thing you thought was an NSString or NSNumber object is really NSNull. One solution is to define a category on NSNull that simply ignores all non-understood messages sent to the object, as per the code below. Then the code you have would work because NSNull.length would return 0. You can include something like this in your project .pch file, which gets included in every single file in your project.
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NSNullequal tonil? – Anon. Jan 13 '10 at 22:28