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Are there any shortcuts to (stringByAppendingString:) string concatenation in Objective-C or shortcuts for working with NSString or other objects in general?

For example, I'd like to make

NSString *myString = @"This";
NSString *test = [myString stringByAppendingString:@" is just a test"];

something more like

string myString = "This";
string test = myString + " is just a test";
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1  
like this style :) – cV2 Mar 14 '11 at 21:59
2  
Objective-C is so needlessly complex -_- Why can't I just do (string1 + string2)? Honestly... – Supuhstar Jan 17 at 21:53
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10 Answers

up vote 202 down vote accepted

I'm guessing you're not happy with multiple appends (a+b+c+d), in which case you could do:

NSLog(@"%@", [Util append:one, @" ", two, nil]); // "one two"
NSLog(@"%@", [Util append:three, @"/", two, @"/", one, nil]); // three/two/one

using something like

+ (NSString *) append:(id) first, ...
{
    NSString * result = @"";
    id eachArg;
    va_list alist;
    if(first)
    {
    	result = [result stringByAppendingString:first];
    	va_start(alist, first);
    	while (eachArg = va_arg(alist, id)) 
    		result = [result stringByAppendingString:eachArg];
    	va_end(alist);
    }
    return result;
}

but you'd get the same result using:

[NSString stringWithFormat:@"%@/%@/%@", three, two, one];
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84  
+1 for the simple stringWithFormat solution – dbr Jul 18 '09 at 5:56
7  
Your second solution is a lot nicer :) – pablasso Aug 1 '09 at 3:26
2  
@pablasso Agreed. The Util method is pretty ugly. If you wanted such a thing, it should be done as a NSString category with a name like +stringByAppendingStrings:. Even a straight-up function with a name like NSStringForAppendedStrings(...) would be better than a static method in a class like Util (anything with "Util" in the name is likely poorly factored). The function is also better implemented with an NSMutableString and -appendString to avoid creating an unbounded set of temporary autoreleased NSStrings. – Rob Napier Feb 16 '10 at 14:34
5  
A real oversight on Apple's part not to implement a simple concatenation operator... – ChrisP May 25 '11 at 18:04
2  
do you know which one is faster? – chanok Jun 1 '11 at 17:22
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Two answers I can think of... neither is particularly as pleasant as just having a concatenation operator.

First, use an NSMutableString, which has an appendString method, removing some of the need for extra temp strings.

Second, use an NSArray to concatenate via the componentsJoinedByString method.

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4  
Although the other option has many upvotes, I think this is the best answer if you don't know all your strings upon construction. Every time you append a string, you're creating a lot of overhead. Using a mutable string removes that problem. – Eli Dec 22 '09 at 1:25
4  
+1 Agree w @Eli. These are generally the best solutions. NSArray -componentsJoinedByString can be done in a single line pretty well: string = [[NSArray arrayWithObjects:@"This", "Is", "A", "Test", nil] componentsJoinedByString:@" "]; – Rob Napier Feb 16 '10 at 14:37
+1 for this answer. [NSMutableString appendString] is more memory friendly than [NSString stringByAppendingStrings]. – Pierre-David Belanger Sep 27 '11 at 14:22
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Shortcut by creating AppendString (AS) macro ...

#define AS(A,B)    [(A) stringByAppendingString:(B)]
NSString *myString = @"This"; NSString *test = AS(myString,@" is just a test");
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Cool! I still think the Util above is a much more elegant solution; you can append only one string with this macro, right? – typeoneerror Jul 18 '09 at 13:02
1  
True, the AS macro above does one append per line of code. If multiple appends are a common need, then more macros can be created. For example, a macro to append two strings: <pre> #define A2S(A,B,C) [[(A) stringByAppendingString:(B)] stringByAppendingString:(C)] </pre> – Jim Logan Jul 18 '09 at 23:54
2  
Or, simply shorten the typing required with a macro like "#define AS stringByAppendingString", then just use "AS" where your would normally type "stringByAppendingString", and enjoy multiple appends per line of code. – Jim Logan Jul 19 '09 at 0:02
woo this helped me, and i don't even know objective-c! – tarnfeld Dec 31 '09 at 9:29
4  
The problem with these macros is that they undermine one of the major goals of Objective-C, which is readability. It's extremely unclear what "AS" does. Saving a few keystrokes (most of which are handled with autocompletion) at the expense of readability is seldom a good trade-off. There are exceptions (the @"" syntax is much more readable than having to use +stringWithUTF8String: every time), but the goal should still be readability rather than simply brevity. You write once, but you debug forever. – Rob Napier Feb 16 '10 at 14:42
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If you have 2 NSString literals, you can also just do this:

NSString *joinedFromLiterals = @"I " @"really " @"enjoy " @"carpenting!";

That's also useful for joining #defines:

#define STRINGA @"AAAA"
#define STRINGB @"BBBB"
#define JOINED STRINGA STRINGB

Enjoy.

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Use this way


NSString *string1,*string2,result;

string1 = @"This is ";
string2 = @"my string.";
result = [NSString alloc];

result = [result stringByAppendingString:string1];
result = [result stringByAppendingString:string2];
 OR

result = [result stringByAppendingString:@"This is "];
result = [result stringByAppendingString:@"my string."];
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The only way to make c = [a stringByAppendingString: b] any shorter is to use autocomplete at around the st point. The + operator is part of C, which doesn't know about Objective-C objects.

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NSString *label1 = @"Process Name: ";
NSString *label2 = @"Process Id: ";
NSString *processName = [[NSProcessInfo processInfo] processName];
NSString *processID = [NSString stringWithFormat:@"%d", [[NSProcessInfo processInfo] processIdentifier]];
NSString *testConcat = [NSString stringWithFormat:@"%@ %@ %@ %@", label1, processName, label2, processID];
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NSString *label1 = @"Process Name: ";
NSString *label2 = @"Process Id: ";
NSString *processName = [[NSProcessInfo processInfo] processName];
NSString *processID = [NSString stringWithFormat:@"%d", [[NSProcessInfo processInfo] processIdentifier]];
NSString *testConcat = [NSString stringWithFormat:@"%@ %@ %@ %@", label1, processName, label2, processID];
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This is for better logging, and logging only - based on dicius excellent multiple argument method. I define a Logger class, and call it like so:

[Logger log: @"foobar ", @" asdads ", theString, nil];

Almost good, except having to end the var args with "nil" but I suppose there's no way around that in Objective-C.

Logger.h

@interface Logger : NSObject {
}
+ (void) log: (id) first, ...;
@end

Logger.m

@implementation Logger

+ (void) log: (id) first, ...
{
    // TODO: make efficient; handle arguments other than strings
    // thanks to @diciu http://stackoverflow.com/questions/510269/how-do-i-concatenate-strings-in-objective-c
    NSString * result = @"";
    id eachArg;
    va_list alist;
    if(first)
    {
        result = [result stringByAppendingString:first];
        va_start(alist, first);
        while (eachArg = va_arg(alist, id)) 
        {
            result = [result stringByAppendingString:eachArg];
        }
        va_end(alist);
    }
    NSLog(@"%@", result);
}

@end 

In order to only concat strings, I'd define a Category on NSString and add a static (+) concatenate method to it that looks exactly like the log method above except it returns the string. It's on NSString because it's a string method, and it's static because you want to create a new string from 1-N strings, not call it on any one of the strings that are part of the append.

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create a method...

- (NSString *)strCat: (NSString *)one: (NSString *)two
{
NSString *myString;
myString = [NSString stringWithFormat:@"%@%@", one , two];
return myString;
}

Then, in whatever function you need it in, set your string or textfield or whatever to the return value of this function.

Hope this helps!!!

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