I would trust the header files over the documentation.
For example, Formatter Behaviors and OS Versions seems to contradict itself:
By default, on Mac OS X v10.4 instances of NSDateFormatter
have the same behavior as they did on Mac OS X versions 10.0 to 10.3. On Mac OS X v10.5 and later, NSDateFormatter
defaults to the 10.4+ behavior.
If you initialize a formatter using initWithDateFormat:allowNaturalLanguage:
, you are (for backwards compatibility reasons) creating an “old-style” date formatter. To use the new behavior, you initialize the formatter with init
. If necessary, you can set the default class behavior using setDefaultFormatterBehavior:
), you can set the behavior for an instance using setFormatterBehavior:
message with the argument NSDateFormatterBehavior10_4
.
It sounds like initWithDateFormat:allowNaturalLanguage:
is actually the deprecated method?