137

So I have an NSArray "myArray" with NSNumbers and NSStrings. I need them in another UIView so i go like this:

- (void)tableView:(UITableView *)tableView didSelectRowAtIndexPath:(NSIndexPath *)indexPath {

DetailViewController *details = [[DetailViewController alloc] initWithNibName:@"DetailView" bundle:nil];
details.subjectText = [[myArray objectAtIndex:indexPath.row] objectForKey:@"subject"];

The subjectText works. But how can I get the NSNumbers out of it? (I actually need them as strings...) I would convert a NSString out of a NSNumber like this: NSString *blah = [NSNumber intValue]. But I don't know how to set it up in the code above...

2
  • Your array seems actually to contain dictionaries, judging by the use of objectForKey. So you'll need to extract the appropriate values from that before attempting to convert. Note that most Cocoa object types, including NSNumber, can be converted to strings by calling the description method (or using %@ in a format string).
    – walkytalky
    Oct 19, 2010 at 16:04
  • wow.. thank you walkytalky! can you point me to a documentation or give a example code to comprehend it? =)
    – dav3
    Oct 19, 2010 at 16:26

7 Answers 7

390

Try:

NSString *myString = [NSNumber stringValue];
5
  • 3
    but you should take the NSNumber which is inside the array and then call StringValue method, something like NSString *myString= [[myArray objectAtIndex:i] stringValue]; but you have to be sure that you have an NSNumber at that index
    – JonLOo
    Oct 19, 2010 at 15:47
  • I prefer descriptionWithLocale:[NSLocale currentLocale] because it works both for ints and floats.
    – just.do.it
    Apr 11, 2015 at 17:22
  • @JonLOo when using this for specific number the decimal values loose exact values. For Eg : NSNumber *num = [NSNumber numberWithDouble:48.3]; NSString *strNumber = num.stringValue; gives results as 48.299999; this becomes critical if its Amount and has to deal with in real world and multiplied with big numbers.!! Any thought?
    – Vish
    Aug 3, 2015 at 6:13
  • hi @Vish, i haven't try this solution so im not sure if it will work, try formatting it with the %f like this: [NSString stringWithFormat:@"%f", yourDouble];
    – JonLOo
    Aug 31, 2015 at 9:02
  • "No known class method for selector 'stringValue'" <-- stringValue is not a class function so you can't call it on NSNumber directly. rhalgravez's answer does it correctly. Dec 27, 2017 at 17:11
14

You can do it with:

NSNumber *myNumber = @15;
NSString *myNumberInString = [myNumber stringValue];
7
//An example of implementation :
// we set the score of one player to a value
[Game getCurrent].scorePlayer1 = [NSNumber numberWithInteger:1];
// We copy the value in a NSNumber
NSNumber *aNumber = [Game getCurrent].scorePlayer1;
// Conversion of the NSNumber aNumber to a String with stringValue
NSString *StringScorePlayer1 = [aNumber stringValue];
5

or try NSString *string = [NSString stringWithFormat:@"%d", [NSNumber intValue], nil];

2
  • 8
    This does two conversions. One to turn NSNumber into intValue and one to coerce the resulting intValue into an NSString. Using this may be small to some, but removing it is a great way to save small computational cycles...which can add up.
    – Jann
    Jun 1, 2011 at 22:56
  • This assumes that the numbers being stored are ints. What if you don't know the type of number stored? Mar 4, 2014 at 13:10
3

The funny thing is that NSNumber converts to string automatically if it becomes a part of a string. I don't think it is documented. Try these:

NSLog(@"My integer NSNumber:%@",[NSNumber numberWithInt:184]);
NSLog(@"My float NSNumber:%@",[NSNumber numberWithFloat:12.23f]);
NSLog(@"My bool(YES) NSNumber:%@",[NSNumber numberWithBool:YES]);
NSLog(@"My bool(NO) NSNumber:%@",[NSNumber numberWithBool:NO]);

NSString *myStringWithNumbers = [NSString stringWithFormat:@"Int:%@, Float:%@ Bool:%@",[NSNumber numberWithInt:132],[NSNumber numberWithFloat:-4.823f],[NSNumber numberWithBool:YES]];
NSLog(@"%@",myStringWithNumbers);

It will print:

My integer NSNumber:184
My float NSNumber:12.23
My bool(YES) NSNumber:1
My bool(NO) NSNumber:0
Int:132, Float:-4.823 Bool:1

Works on both Mac and iOS

This one does not work:

NSString *myNSNumber2 = [NSNumber numberWithFloat:-34512.23f];
1
  • 2
    This is documented: the %@ format specifier will send the -description message to the corresponding receiver object. You can make your last line work in the same spirit by writing: NSString *myNSNumber2 = [[NSNumber numberWithFloat:-34512.23f] description];. As far as I can tell, NSNumber's description and stringValue methods do the same thing. Mar 22, 2016 at 8:08
2

In Swift you can do like this

let number : NSNumber = 95
let str : String = number.stringValue
2

In Swift 3.0

let number:NSNumber = 25
let strValue = String(describing: number as NSNumber)
print("As String => \(strValue)")

We can get the number value in String.

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