22

I had called an interface of Baidu to check id Number, however the value of Sex returned with sex = M, without "" around the M in JSON, when I use NSString in module to store it and then print the class name of this sex property, it printed as NSTaggedPointerString, I doubt how to convert it to a String to use it. Anyone have good ideas?

1
  • { errNum = 0; retData = { address = "\U6e56\U5317\U7701\U7701\U76f4\U8f96\U53bf\U7ea7\U884c\U653f\U533a\U5212\U4ed9\U6843\U5e02"; birthday = "1989-07-10"; sex = M; }; retMsg = success; } This is the JSON that returns Oct 19, 2015 at 5:47

5 Answers 5

37

NSTaggedPointerString is already an NSString, it's just a subclass. You can use it anywhere you can use an NSString, without conversion.

8
  • Thanks, I just find it as I used the wrong arguments in swift, it should use %@ just as Obj-C but I used the %s instead. I fixed the error. Oct 20, 2015 at 7:00
  • In my cace,when does not convert than makes warnning \n "Incompatible pointer types initializing ~~"
    – Kernelzero
    Apr 6, 2016 at 8:02
  • 1
    That's a different issue entirely. NSTaggedPointerString is about the dynamic type of the object. Your issue is about the type you have written in your source code. Apr 6, 2016 at 17:16
  • 1
    po [NSClassFromString(@"NSTaggedPointerString") superclass] will prove your answer.
    – DawnSong
    May 6, 2016 at 7:19
  • 1
    That sounds like something else. The issue I mentioned in the comments wouldn't apply to anything while the app is running, only when it's being compiled. May 30, 2016 at 9:11
11

I have encountered places where NSTaggedPointerString cannot be used as a NSString, such as when creating an NSDictionary. In those cases use stringWithString::

NSString* <# myNSString #> = [NSString stringWithString:<# myNSTaggegedString #>];
1
  • I found it easier to just say NSDictionary *aDict = @{[myvar valueForKey:@"item"] since the .property doesn't work well. KVO to the rescue Apr 21, 2016 at 19:36
3

I had this same issue multiple times. It would seem that type inference for NSDictionary is not an exact science. What I do is specifically ask if the object responds to a particular method. For example if I am looping through parsing some JSON and I am attempting to access a value of type NSString:

NSString * string;
if ([[dict objectForKey:@"value"] respondsToSelector:@selector(stringValue)]) {
    string = [[dict objectForKey:@"value"] stringValue];
}
else {
   string = [NSString stringWithString:[dict objectForKey:@"value"]];
}
documentFile.documentRevision = string;
0

In my case son {"count":"123"} I got error. Solved:

// Data was created, we leave it to you to display all of those tall tales!
// NSLog(@«data: %@", [[NSString alloc] initWithData:data encoding:NSUTF8StringEncoding]);

NSDictionary * json  = [NSJSONSerialization JSONObjectWithData:data options:0 error:nil];
if ([json isKindOfClass:[NSDictionary class]]){ //Added instrospection as suggested in comment.
                  NSArray *dicArray = json[@"count"];
                   NSLog(@"=:%@", dicArray);

 }
0

for Swift 3 or 4

String(stringInterpolationSegment: taggedPointerString) 

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.