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I have an enum holding several values:

enum {value1, value2, value3} myValue;

In a certain point in my app, I wish to check which value of the enum is now active. I'm using NSLog but I'm not clear on how to display the current value of the enum (value1/valu2/valu3/etc...) as a NSString for the NSLog.

Anyone?

share|improve this question
    
User NSEnum, if you are planning to switch to Swift in the future – Basheer_CAD Feb 9 '15 at 13:44
    
Consider this stackoverflow.com/a/21938004/215282 for the answer. People started to vote up nowdays. – Geri May 26 '15 at 0:56

14 Answers 14

up vote 41 down vote accepted

This is answered here: a few suggestions on implementation

The bottom line is Objective-C is using a regular, old C enum, which is just a glorified set of integers.

Given an enum like this:

typedef enum { a, b, c } FirstThreeAlpha;

Your method would look like this:

- (NSString*) convertToString:(FirstThreeAlpha) whichAlpha {
    NSString *result = nil;

    switch(whichAlpha) {
        case a:
            result = @"a";
            break;
        case b:
            result = @"b";
            break;
        case c:
            result = @"c";
            break;

        default:
            result = @"unknown";
    }

    return result;
}
share|improve this answer
    
See my answer below for a more elegant solution using the stringize operator. – BooTooMany Oct 23 '14 at 16:18

I didn't like putting the enum on the heap, without providing a heap function for translation. Here's what I came up with:

typedef enum {value1, value2, value3} myValue;
#define myValueString(enum) [@[@"value1",@"value2",@"value3"] objectAtIndex:enum]

This keeps the enum and string declarations close together for easy updating when needed.

Now, anywhere in the code, you can use the enum/macro like this:

myValue aVal = value2;
NSLog(@"The enum value is '%@'.", myValueString(aVal));

outputs: The enum value is 'value2'.

To guarantee the element indexes, you can always explicitly declare the start(or all) enum values.

enum {value1=0, value2=1, value3=2};
share|improve this answer
    
This is beautiful, thanks! – Denis Balko Apr 22 at 23:38
    
not sure why this was never accepted as the best answer.. lol – Will Von Ullrich Aug 10 at 20:04
    
Crashes if enum is not valid though. – Franz See Aug 24 at 12:52

I will introduce is the way I use, and it looks better than previous answer.(I thinks)

I would like to illustrate with UIImageOrientation for easy understanding.

typedef enum {
    UIImageOrientationUp = 0,            // default orientation, set to 0 so that it always starts from 0
    UIImageOrientationDown,          // 180 deg rotation
    UIImageOrientationLeft,          // 90 deg CCW
    UIImageOrientationRight,         // 90 deg CW
    UIImageOrientationUpMirrored,    // as above but image mirrored along other axis. horizontal flip
    UIImageOrientationDownMirrored,  // horizontal flip
    UIImageOrientationLeftMirrored,  // vertical flip
    UIImageOrientationRightMirrored, // vertical flip
} UIImageOrientation;

create a method like:

NSString *stringWithUIImageOrientation(UIImageOrientation input) {
    NSArray *arr = @[
    @"UIImageOrientationUp",            // default orientation
    @"UIImageOrientationDown",          // 180 deg rotation
    @"UIImageOrientationLeft",          // 90 deg CCW
    @"UIImageOrientationRight",         // 90 deg CW
    @"UIImageOrientationUpMirrored",    // as above but image mirrored along other axis. horizontal flip
    @"UIImageOrientationDownMirrored",  // horizontal flip
    @"UIImageOrientationLeftMirrored",  // vertical flip
    @"UIImageOrientationRightMirrored", // vertical flip
    ];
    return (NSString *)[arr objectAtIndex:input];
}

All you have to do is :

  1. name your function.

  2. copy contents of enum and paste that between NSArray *arr = @[ and ]; return (NSString *)[arr objectAtIndex:input];

  3. put some @ , " , and comma

  4. PROFIT!!!!

share|improve this answer
6  
way to fragile... you asume enum values go from 0 onwards in increments of 1 – Daij-Djan Jun 16 '13 at 19:12
3  
If you aren't incrementing from 0, use a lookup dictionary, like @{@(MyEnumValue1):@"MyEnumValue1"}. That will work for all cases. – Peter DeWeese Feb 11 '14 at 16:17

This will be validated by compiler, so you won't mix up indices accidentally.

NSDictionary *stateStrings =
 @{
   @(MCSessionStateNotConnected) : @"MCSessionStateNotConnected",
   @(MCSessionStateConnecting) : @"MCSessionStateConnecting",
   @(MCSessionStateConnected) : @"MCSessionStateConnected",
  };
NSString *stateString = [stateStrings objectForKey:@(state)];
share|improve this answer

I found this website (from which the example below is taken) which provides an elegant solution to this problem. The original posting though comes from this StackOverflow answer.

// Place this in your .h file, outside the @interface block
typedef enum {
    JPG,
    PNG,
    GIF,
    PVR
} kImageType;
#define kImageTypeArray @"JPEG", @"PNG", @"GIF", @"PowerVR", nil

...

// Place this in the .m file, inside the @implementation block
// A method to convert an enum to string
-(NSString*) imageTypeEnumToString:(kImageType)enumVal
{
    NSArray *imageTypeArray = [[NSArray alloc] initWithObjects:kImageTypeArray];
    return [imageTypeArray objectAtIndex:enumVal];
}

// A method to retrieve the int value from the NSArray of NSStrings
-(kImageType) imageTypeStringToEnum:(NSString*)strVal
{
    NSArray *imageTypeArray = [[NSArray alloc] initWithObjects:kImageTypeArray];
    NSUInteger n = [imageTypeArray indexOfObject:strVal];
    if(n < 1) n = JPG;
    return (kImageType) n;
}
share|improve this answer
    
I ended up using this one +1. – Jonny Ramos May 23 '15 at 22:54

If I can offer another solution that has the added benefit of type checking, warnings if you are missing an enum value in your conversion, readability, and brevity.

For your given example: typedef enum { value1, value2, value3 } myValue; you can do this:

NSString *NSStringFromMyValue(myValue type) {
    const char* c_str = 0;
#define PROCESS_VAL(p) case(p): c_str = #p; break;
    switch(type) {
            PROCESS_VAL(value1);
            PROCESS_VAL(value2);
            PROCESS_VAL(value3);
    }
#undef PROCESS_VAL

    return [NSString stringWithCString:c_str encoding:NSASCIIStringEncoding];
}

As a side note. It is a better approach to declare your enums as so:

typedef NS_ENUM(NSInteger, MyValue) {
    Value1 = 0,
    Value2,
    Value3
}

With this you get type-safety (NSInteger in this case), you set the expected enum offset (= 0).

share|improve this answer

The solution below uses the preprocessor's stringize operator, allowing for a more elegant solution. It lets you define the enum terms in just one place for greater resilience against typos.

First, define your enum in the following way.

#define ENUM_TABLE \
X(ENUM_ONE),    \
X(ENUM_TWO)    \

#define X(a)    a
typedef enum Foo {
    ENUM_TABLE
} MyFooEnum;
#undef X

#define X(a)    @#a
NSString * const enumAsString[] = {
    ENUM_TABLE
};
#undef X

Now, use it in the following way:

// Usage
MyFooEnum t = ENUM_ONE;
NSLog(@"Enum test - t is: %@", enumAsString[t]);

t = ENUM_TWO;
NSLog(@"Enum test - t is now: %@", enumAsString[t]);

which outputs:

2014-10-22 13:36:21.344 FooProg[367:60b] Enum test - t is: ENUM_ONE
2014-10-22 13:36:21.344 FooProg[367:60b] Enum test - t is now: ENUM_TWO

@pixel's answer pointed me in the right direction.

share|improve this answer
    
seems to be an elegant solution but this gives me Mach-O Linker error saying duplicate symbols for enumAsString when I use it in the code as sampled. – Mahendra Jan 2 '15 at 6:44
    
@Mahendra - enumAsString is declared globally, so if you are re-declaring it in another header file, you will get the duplicate symbol error. The fix is simple: declare a variant of enumAsString for each variable type (and each enum table) in each file - e.g. retcodeAsString, tagValueAsString, etc. – BooTooMany Jan 5 '15 at 22:00

In some cases when you need to convert enum -> NSString and NSString -> enum it might be simpler to use a typedef and #define (or const NSStrings) instead of enum:

typedef NSString *        ImageType;
#define ImageTypeJpg      @"JPG"
#define ImageTypePng      @"PNG"
#define ImageTypeGif      @"GIF"

and then just operate with "named" strings as with any other NSString:

@interface MyData : NSObject
@property (copy, nonatomic) ImageType imageType;
@end

@implementation MyData
- (void)doSomething {
    //...
    self.imageType = ImageTypePng;
    //...
    if ([self.imageType isEqualToString:ImageTypeJpg]) {
        //...
    }
}
@end
share|improve this answer

Here is a plug-and-play solution that you can extend with a simple copy and paste of your EXISTING definitions.

I hope you all find it useful, as I have found useful so many other StackOverflow solutions.

- (NSString*) enumItemNameForPrefix:(NSString*)enumPrefix item:(int)enumItem {
NSString* enumList = nil;
if ([enumPrefix isEqualToString:@"[Add Your Enum Name Here"]) {
    // Instructions:
    // 1) leave all code as is (it's good reference and won't conflict)
    // 2) add your own enums below as follows:
    //    2.1) duplicate the LAST else block below and add as many enums as you like
    //    2.2) Copy then Paste your list, including carraige returns
    //    2.3) add a back slash at the end of each line to concatenate the broken string
    // 3) your are done.
}
else if ([enumPrefix isEqualToString:@"ExampleNonExplicitType"]) {
    enumList = @" \
    ExampleNonExplicitTypeNEItemName1, \
    ExampleNonExplicitTypeNEItemName2, \
    ExampleNonExplicitTypeNEItemName3 \
    ";
}
else if ([enumPrefix isEqualToString:@"ExampleExplicitAssignsType"]) {
    enumList = @" \
    ExampleExplicitAssignsTypeEAItemName1 = 1, \
    ExampleExplicitAssignsTypeEAItemName2 = 2, \
    ExampleExplicitAssignsTypeEAItemName3 = 4 \
    ";
}
else if ([enumPrefix isEqualToString:@"[Duplicate and Add Your Enum Name Here #1"]) {
    // Instructions:
    // 1) duplicate this else block and add as many enums as you like
    // 2) Paste your list, including carraige returns
    // 3) add a back slash at the end of each line to continue/concatenate the broken string
    enumList = @" \
    [Replace only this line: Paste your Enum Definition List Here] \
    ";
}

// parse it
int implicitIndex = 0;
NSString* itemKey = nil;
NSString* itemValue = nil;
NSArray* enumArray = [enumList componentsSeparatedByString:@","];
NSMutableDictionary* enumDict = [[[NSMutableDictionary alloc] initWithCapacity:enumArray.count] autorelease];

for (NSString* itemPair in enumArray) {
    NSArray* itemPairArray = [itemPair componentsSeparatedByString:@"="];
    itemValue = [[itemPairArray objectAtIndex:0] stringByTrimmingCharactersInSet:[NSCharacterSet whitespaceAndNewlineCharacterSet]];
    itemKey = [NSString stringWithFormat:@"%d", implicitIndex];
    if (itemPairArray.count > 1)
        itemKey = [[itemPairArray lastObject] stringByTrimmingCharactersInSet:[NSCharacterSet whitespaceAndNewlineCharacterSet]];
    [enumDict setValue:itemValue forKey:itemKey];
    implicitIndex++;
}

// return value with or without prefix
NSString* withPrefix = [enumDict valueForKey:[NSString stringWithFormat:@"%d", enumItem]];
NSString* withoutPrefix = [withPrefix stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString:enumPrefix withString:@""];
NSString* outValue = (0 ? withPrefix : withoutPrefix);
if (0) NSLog(@"enum:%@ item:%d retVal:%@ dict:%@", enumPrefix, enumItem, outValue, enumDict);
return outValue;
}

Here are the example declarations:

typedef enum _type1 {
ExampleNonExplicitTypeNEItemName1, 
ExampleNonExplicitTypeNEItemName2, 
ExampleNonExplicitTypeNEItemName3
} ExampleNonExplicitType;

typedef enum _type2 {
ExampleExplicitAssignsTypeEAItemName1 = 1, 
ExampleExplicitAssignsTypeEAItemName2 = 2, 
ExampleExplicitAssignsTypeEAItemName3 = 4
} ExampleExplicitAssignsType;

Here is an example call:

NSLog(@"EXAMPLE:  type1:%@  type2:%@ ", [self enumItemNameForPrefix:@"ExampleNonExplicitType" item:ExampleNonExplicitTypeNEItemName2], [self enumItemNameForPrefix:@"ExampleExplicitAssignsType" item:ExampleExplicitAssignsTypeEAItemName3]);

Enjoy! ;-)

share|improve this answer

You could use X macros - they are perfect for this.

Benefits 1. the relationship between the actual enum value and the string value is in one place. 2. you can use regular switch statements later in your code.

Detriment 1. The initial setup code is a bit obtuse, and uses fun macros.

The code

#define X(a, b, c) a b,
enum ZZObjectType {
    ZZOBJECTTYPE_TABLE
};
typedef NSUInteger TPObjectType;
#undef X

#define XXOBJECTTYPE_TABLE \
X(ZZObjectTypeZero, = 0, "ZZObjectTypeZero") \
X(ZZObjectTypeOne, = 1, "ZZObjectTypeOne") \
X(ZZObjectTypeTwo, = 2, "ZZObjectTypeTwo") \
X(ZZObjectTypeThree, = 3, "ZZObjectTypeThree") \

+ (NSString*)nameForObjectType:(ZZObjectType)objectType {
#define X(a, b, c) @c, [NSNumber numberWithInteger:a],
    NSDictionary *returnValue = [NSDictionary dictionaryWithObjectsAndKeys:ZZOBJECTTYPE_TABLE nil];
#undef X
    return [returnValue objectForKey:[NSNumber numberWithInteger:objectType]];
}

+ (ZZObjectType)objectTypeForName:(NSString *)objectTypeString {
#define X(a, b, c) [NSNumber numberWithInteger:a], @c,
    NSDictionary *dictionary = [NSDictionary dictionaryWithObjectsAndKeys:ZZOBJECTSOURCE_TABLE nil];
#undef X
    NSUInteger value = [(NSNumber *)[dictionary objectForKey:objectTypeString] intValue];
    return (ZZObjectType)value;
}

Now you can do:

NSString *someString = @"ZZObjectTypeTwo"
ZZObjectType objectType = [[XXObject objectTypeForName:someString] intValue];
switch (objectType) {
    case ZZObjectTypeZero:
        //
        break;
    case ZZObjectTypeOne:
        //
        break;
    case ZZObjectTypeTwo:
        //
        break;
}

This pattern has been around since the 1960's (no kidding!): http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X_Macro

share|improve this answer
    
A brilliant solution with minimum overhead and maximum readability and usability! Thanks! And the macros is fun indeed! ) – voiger May 31 at 14:55

This is similar to the "X" macro post by pixel. thanks for the link to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X_Macro

Code generated in macros can be tricky and hard to debug. Instead, generate a table that is used by "normal" code. I find that many people object to having macros generate code, and may be one reason the technique of "X Macros" as presented in the wiki is not widely adopted.

By generating a table, you still need only edit one place to extend the list, and since you can't "step through" a table in the debugger, this removes the objection from many people about multi-lines of code buried in macros.

//------------------------------------------------------------------------------
// enum to string example
#define FOR_EACH_GENDER(tbd) \
        tbd(GENDER_MALE) \
        tbd(GENDER_FEMALE) \
        tbd(GENDER_INTERSEX) \

#define ONE_GENDER_ENUM(name) name,
enum
{
    FOR_EACH_GENDER(ONE_GENDER_ENUM)
    MAX_GENDER
};

#define ONE_GENDER(name) #name,
static const char *enumGENDER_TO_STRING[] = 
{
    FOR_EACH_GENDER(ONE_GENDER)
};

// access string name with enumGENDER_TO_STRING[value]
// or, to be safe converting from a untrustworthy caller
static const char *enumGenderToString(unsigned int value)
{
    if (value < MAX_GENDER)
    {
        return enumGENDER_TO_STRING[value];
    }
    return NULL;
}

static void printAllGenders(void)
{
    for (int ii = 0;  ii < MAX_GENDER;  ii++)
    {
        printf("%d) gender %s\n", ii, enumGENDER_TO_STRING[ii]);
    }
}

//------------------------------------------------------------------------------
// you can assign an arbitrary value and/or information to each enum,
#define FOR_EACH_PERSON(tbd) \
        tbd(2, PERSON_FRED,     "Fred",     "Weasley", GENDER_MALE,   12) \
        tbd(4, PERSON_GEORGE,   "George",   "Weasley", GENDER_MALE,   12) \
        tbd(6, PERSON_HARRY,    "Harry",    "Potter",  GENDER_MALE,   10) \
        tbd(8, PERSON_HERMIONE, "Hermione", "Granger", GENDER_FEMALE, 10) \

#define ONE_PERSON_ENUM(value, ename, first, last, gender, age) ename = value,
enum
{
    FOR_EACH_PERSON(ONE_PERSON_ENUM)
};

typedef struct PersonInfoRec
{
    int value;
    const char *ename;
    const char *first;
    const char *last;
    int gender;
    int age;
} PersonInfo;

#define ONE_PERSON_INFO(value, ename, first, last, gender, age) \
                     { ename, #ename, first, last, gender, age },
static const PersonInfo personInfo[] = 
{
    FOR_EACH_PERSON(ONE_PERSON_INFO)
    { 0, NULL, NULL, NULL, 0, 0 }
};
// note: if the enum values are not sequential, you need another way to lookup
// the information besides personInfo[ENUM_NAME]

static void printAllPersons(void)
{
    for (int ii = 0;  ;  ii++)
    {
        const PersonInfo *pPI = &personInfo[ii];
        if (!pPI->ename)
        {
            break;
        }
        printf("%d) enum %-15s  %8s %-8s %13s %2d\n",
            pPI->value, pPI->ename, pPI->first, pPI->last,
            enumGenderToString(pPI->gender), pPI->age);
    }
}
share|improve this answer

Below is a example of Enum Struct that is Objective-C friendly in the event you need to use Swift Code in Legacy projects written in Objective-C.

Example:

contentType.filename. toString()

returns "filename"


contentType.filename. rawValue

returns the Int Value, 1 (since its the second item on struct)

@objc enum contentType:Int {

    //date when content was created [RFC2183]
    case creationDate

    //name to be used when creating file    [RFC2183]
    case filename

    //whether or not processing is required [RFC3204]
    case handling

    //date when content was last modified   [RFC2183]
    case modificationDate

    //original field name in form   [RFC7578]
    case name

    //Internet media type (and parameters) of the preview output desired from a processor by the author of the MIME content [RFC-ietf-appsawg-text-markdown-12]
    case previewType

    //date when content was last read   [RFC2183]
    case readDate

    //approximate size of content in octets [RFC2183]
    case size

    //type or use of audio content  [RFC2421]
    case voice

    func toString() -> String {
        switch self {
        case .creationDate:
            return "creation-date"
        case .filename:
            return "filename"
        case .handling:
            return "handling"
        case .modificationDate:
            return "modification-date"
        case .name:
            return "name"
        case .previewType:
            return "preview-type"
        case .readDate:
                return "read-date"
        case .size:
            return "size"
        case .voice:
            return "voice"
        }
    }//eom
}//eo-enum
share|improve this answer

This is an old question, but if you have a non contiguous enum use a dictionary literal instead of an array:

typedef enum {
    value1 = 0,
    value2 = 1,
    value3 = 2,

    // beyond value3
    value1000 = 1000,
    value1001
} MyType;

#define NSStringFromMyType( value ) \
( \
    @{ \
        @( value1 )    : @"value1", \
        @( value2 )    : @"value2", \
        @( value3 )    : @"value3", \
        @( value1000 ) : @"value1000", \
        @( value1001 ) : @"value1001", \
    } \
    [ @( value ) ] \
)
share|improve this answer
  1. a macro:

    #define stringWithLiteral(literal) @#literal
    
  2. an enum:

    typedef NS_ENUM(NSInteger, EnumType) {
        EnumType0,
        EnumType1,
        EnumType2
    };
    
  3. an array:

    static NSString * const EnumTypeNames[] = {
        stringWithLiteral(EnumType0),
        stringWithLiteral(EnumType1),
        stringWithLiteral(EnumType2)
    };
    
  4. using:

    EnumType enumType = ...;
    NSString *enumName = EnumTypeNames[enumType];
    

==== EDIT ====

Copy the following code to your project and run.

typedef NS_ENUM(NSInteger, EnumType) {
    EnumType0,
    EnumType1,
    EnumType2
};

static NSString * const EnumTypeNames[] = {
    stringWithLiteral(EnumType0),
    stringWithLiteral(EnumType1),
    stringWithLiteral(EnumType2)
};

- (void)test {
    EnumType enumType = EnumType1;
    NSString *enumName = EnumTypeNames[enumType];
    NSLog(@"enumName: %@", enumName);
}
share|improve this answer
    
Don't work! The macro only prints the literal value on the arguments. – diegodsp Oct 6 at 12:35
    
Hey @diegodsp, did you try??? Copy the code in my EDIT to your project and run. – iwill Oct 9 at 13:09

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