1

I have an array of objects that I convert to a NSSet:

NSArray *arr = @[@{ @"someProp": @21, @"unnecessaryProp": @"tada" }, ... ];
NSSet *collection = [NSSet setWithArray:arr];

I would like to project the properties I want (by key) out of each object in the set and end up with a new array like:

NSArray *projectedArray = [collection allObjects]; // @[@{ "someProp": @21 }, ... ], "unnecessaryProp" has been removed

Besides enumeration, is there any other way, perhaps NSPredicate?

NOTE: The objects in the array are subclasses of NSObject, in my example I mentioned a NSDictionary

2
  • From a comment on a deleted answer: "But I do not care about the values, I just want to filter by key, return a new array containing only objects with a set of keys I want" Then what you want is called a projection. NSPredicates don't do projections. May 16, 2014 at 12:47
  • Oh, did not know the term ... thanks for it, I'll update the description
    – Roland
    May 16, 2014 at 12:48

3 Answers 3

1

Since NSPredicate does not do projections, you would end up enumerating the set. I would enumerate it with a block, and project the keys in the individual dictionaries like this:

NSArray *keep= @["someProp"];
NSMutableArray *res = [NSMutableArray array];
[collection enumerateObjectsUsingBlock:^(id dict, BOOL *stop) {
    NSArray *values = [dict objectsForKeys:keep notFoundMarker:@""];
    [res addObject:[NSDictionary dictionaryWithObjects:values forKeys:keep]];
}];

EDIT : (in response to comments)

I should have mentioned that the objects inside the array are subclasses of NSObject and objectsForKeys is not a method.

Then you could use MartinR's suggestion to build a dictionary using KVC:

NSArray *keep= @["someProp"];
NSMutableArray *res = [NSMutableArray array];
[collection enumerateObjectsUsingBlock:^(id obj, BOOL *stop) {
    [res addObject:[obj dictionaryWithValuesForKeys:keep]];
}];
8
  • Probably I should have mentioned that the objects inside the array are subclasses of NSObject and objectsForKeys is not a method.
    – Roland
    May 16, 2014 at 13:13
  • @rolandjitsu Your post is showing NSDictionary objects @{ "someProp": 21, "unnecessaryProp": @"tada" } inside NSArray. If the objects inside are your objects, not dictionaries, you would have to do the individual projections manually as well. May 16, 2014 at 13:16
  • 2
    @rolandjitsu: You can use dictionaryWithValuesForKeys, which can be applied to any object, uses KVC, and returns a dictionary with the values for the given keys.
    – Martin R
    May 16, 2014 at 13:18
  • @MartinR, I just used that method and then used this answer's suggestion.
    – Roland
    May 16, 2014 at 13:20
  • @dasblinkenlight, that is my mistake, I should have added the proper description
    – Roland
    May 16, 2014 at 13:21
0

If you only need the values for one property of the objects in a collection of type NSSet or NSArray or their subclasses, you can use the KVC method valueForKey:

NSArray *dogs = @[@{@"name" : @"Fido",
                @"toys" : @[@"Ball", @"Kong"]},
                @{@"name" : @"Rover",
                @"toys" : @[@"Ball", @"Rope"]},
                @{@"name" : @"Spot",
                @"toys" : @[@"Rope", @"Kong"]}];

NSArray *vals = [set valueForKey:@"name"];
NSLog(@"%@", vals);

The above code prints the following on the console:

2014-05-16 09:26:58.293 xctest[17223:303] (
    Fido,
    Rover,
    Spot
)

If you need the values of several properties of the objects in the collection, use dictionaryWithValuesForKeys:. Given the same array as in the previous example, the following code...

NSDictionary *dict = [dogs dictionaryWithValuesForKeys:@[@"name", @"toys"]];
NSLog(@"%@", dict);

produces an array of dictionaries, and logs the following output:

2014-05-16 09:35:34.793 xctest[17275:303] {
    name =     (
        Fido,
        Rover,
        Spot
    );
    toys =     (
                (
            Ball,
            Kong
        ),
                (
            Ball,
            Rope
        ),
                (
            Rope,
            Kong
        )
    );
}

This works regardless of whether the objects in the target collections are instances of NSDictionary or of custom classes.

-1

you can use indexOfObjectPassingTest on your array or NSSet.

__block NSUInteger  maxIdex = [_myArrray count]-1;
__block NSMutableIndexSet* objToRemove = [[NSMutableIndexSet alloc]init];

    [_myArrray indexOfObjectPassingTest:^(id object, NSUInteger idx, BOOL * stop){

        MyObject *obj = (MyObject*)object;
        if(....){

            [objToRemove addIndex:[_myArrray indexOfObject:obj]];
        }

        *stop = (idx == maxIdex);
        return *stop;
    }];

 [_myArrray removeObjectsAtIndexes:objToRemove];

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.