vote up 2 vote down star

Why is the following code (in cocoa) not working?

NSString *extension = [fileName pathExtension];
NSString *wantedExtension = @"mp3";
if(extension == wantedExtension){
//work
}

in Xcode this just runs without warnings or errors but doesn't do what I think it SHOULD do.

flag

73% accept rate

3 Answers

vote up 17 vote down check

Shouldn't that be

if ([extension isEqualToString:wantedExtension]) {
...
}

"==" compares the pointers. isEqual: and isEqualToString: compare the strings, although isEqualToString is better if you know both extension and wantedExtension are NSString (which you do in this case).

Actually, if you're an old C++ and Java programmer like me, you might be happier putting the one that is known not to be null, "wantedextension", first. In Objective C that is not necessary because "sending a message" (ie calling a method) to a nil returns 0 or false.

if ([wantedExtension isEqualToString:extension]) {
   ...
}
link|flag
I see Paul has been studying Objective-C. – Kristopher Johnson Jan 27 at 19:42
Yup, that's my first ObjC answer. Thanks for the code, by the way, it's very helpful. – Paul Tomblin Jan 27 at 20:15
Given that isEqualToString returns a BOOL, and messaging nil will return 0, why is the second form safer? – Barry Wark Jan 27 at 22:25
I don't think there's any real difference. You should get the same result if either is nil. – Martin Pilkington Jan 27 at 23:14
Correct me if I'm wrong, but I thought the "message on a null returns 0 or false" was a new feature in 2.0? – Paul Tomblin Jan 28 at 2:44
show 3 more comments
vote up 8 vote down

Paul's answer is technically correct, but as stated in the NSString documentation, "When you know both objects are strings, this method [isEqualToString:] is a faster way to check equality than isEqual:." Thus, for your example code, the correct test is

if([extension isEqualToString:wantedExtension]) {
    ...
}

If extension is nil, the result will be false, even if wantedExtension is non-nil, since messaging nil in Objective-C returns 0 for BOOL return-valued functions.

link|flag
I've edited my answer to use isEqualToString. Thanks. – Paul Tomblin Jan 27 at 21:08
No worries. I have to look up the isEqualToX docs every time I use them! – Barry Wark Jan 27 at 22:24
vote up 2 vote down

Remember that in Objective-C there is no operator overloading. What the == is doing in this case is a perfectly legal and well-used usage, comparing two pointers. You have two pointers that will always point to two different objects, so the == operator will always be false.

link|flag
Two NSStrings set to identical text point to the same object, masking the unsuitability of using == for comparisons. Fooled me into trusting it to match a literal and a returned string. Doh. – willc2 Apr 6 at 10:59

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

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