I'm just starting out with iphone development and ran across some example code that used @"somestring"
someLabel.txt = @"string of text";
Why does the string need the '@'? I'm guessing it's some kind of shortcut for creating an object?
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I'm just starting out with iphone development and ran across some example code that used @"somestring"
Why does the string need the '@'? I'm guessing it's some kind of shortcut for creating an object? |
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It creates an NSString object with that string as opposed to the standard c char* that would be created without the '@' |
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In Objective-C, the syntax @"foo" is an immutable, literal instance of NSString. |
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Just an interesting side note... NSString literals created by using the @"..." notation are not Just a caution that if you want to maintain control over whether or not this object gets released (freed) down the road you may want to consider using something like:
...instead. This would create an autoreleased version of the same string that will be freed from memory next time the "autorelease pool is drained". Just food for thought. Cheers- |
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