I have an 3 NSMutableArray
objects that contain CMTime
objects. How can I iterate through all three of them in an efficient manner and find out if there are duplicate values in all three? For example, I'm iterating through one of time and reading the value and storing it in x
. Now, I want to see if x
occurs (at any position) within the other two arrays. I tried looking for a contains
method, but couldn't find one. I did come across filterUsingPredicate
, but I'm not sure if this is the best way of doing it nor how to actually use predicates.
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Is it possible to use sets instead of arrays?– IcydogOct 6, 2011 at 21:40
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I could do, but it would mean refactoring parts of the code and, ultimately, I need to convert it back to an array to work with some third party methods which may make it inefficient. I think fluchtpunkt's method should be ok.– XSLOct 6, 2011 at 21:46
2 Answers
I tried looking for a contains method, but couldn't find one.
Use indexOfObject:
like this:
if ([array indexOfObject:object] != NSNotFound) {
// object found
}
else {
// object not found
}
You can use ([yourArray indexOfObject:x] != NSNotFound)
in place of your missing contains
method. However, if you're doing this quickly, often, or with a lot of elements, you should consider using NSMutableOrderedSet
, which is ordered like NSMutableArray
, but offers a quick and efficient contains
method, as well as allowing quick operations like union and intersection, which might allow you to redesign your algorithm to iterate through your elements much less.
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1I will try the
indexOf
method and see if it becomes a bottleneck in performance. If so, I'll compare it with the Set and see if swapping between arrays and Sets is faster (as I need the final output to be an array so that it can be used in third party APIs).– XSLOct 6, 2011 at 21:51 -
1Very wise; don't prematurely optimize. Conversion to
NSArray
should be fast. There's anarray
method that returns a proxy that reflects changes in the original, which is cool.– andyvn22Oct 6, 2011 at 23:02 -
Thanks for the info. I'm quite new to ObjC, so finding all these methods is very helpful.– XSLOct 7, 2011 at 0:05