I'm doing a presentation on debugging in Xcode and would like to get more information on using NSLog efficiently. I'd like to know if there are any tips and tricks to using NSLog which you guys have picked up.

For example,

  • is there a way to easily NSLog the current method's name / line number?
  • is there a way to "disable" all NSLogs easily before compiling for release code?

Any other tips would be appreciated.

Thanks.

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closed as not constructive by casperOne Nov 28 '11 at 1:26

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9 Answers

up vote 169 down vote accepted

Here are some useful macros around NSLog I use a lot:

#ifdef DEBUG
#   define DLog(fmt, ...) NSLog((@"%s [Line %d] " fmt), __PRETTY_FUNCTION__, __LINE__, ##__VA_ARGS__);
#else
#   define DLog(...)
#endif

// ALog always displays output regardless of the DEBUG setting
#define ALog(fmt, ...) NSLog((@"%s [Line %d] " fmt), __PRETTY_FUNCTION__, __LINE__, ##__VA_ARGS__);

The DLog macro is used to only output when the DEBUG variable is set (-DDEBUG in the projects's C flags for the debug confirguration).

ALog will always output text (like the regular NSLog).

The output (e.g. ALog(@"Hello world") ) will look like this:

-[LibraryController awakeFromNib] [Line 364] Hello world
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Why do you have a ##? I thought that it was for gluing arguments together, but you aren't gluing to anything. – Casebash Jan 29 '10 at 5:58
1  
This prevents possible macro expansion of the arguments – Diederik Hoogenboom Jan 31 '10 at 8:59
1  
What if you have an if statement followed by a DLog without braces? When you compile in release mode and the DLog dissapears, won’t the if grab the next line after DLog? – zoul Mar 30 '10 at 17:24
4  
That could be a very nasty bug, especially for people who don’t know much about macros. But I’ve just tried it and the preprocessor inserts a ; after the empty macro, so that everything works as expected. – zoul Mar 31 '10 at 16:31
1  
The '##' notation is a GNU extension to the standard C preprocessor notation which allows zero arguments in lieu of the ellipsis where the C standard requires at least one argument. – Jonathan Leffler Dec 22 '10 at 15:56
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I've taken DLog and ALog from above, and added ULog which raises a UIAlertView message.

To summarize:

  • DLog will output like NSLog only when the DEBUG variable is set
  • ALog will always output like NSLog
  • ULog will show the UIAlertView only when the DEBUG variable is set
#ifdef DEBUG
#   define DLog(fmt, ...) NSLog((@"%s [Line %d] " fmt), __PRETTY_FUNCTION__, __LINE__, ##__VA_ARGS__);
#else
#   define DLog(...)
#endif
#define ALog(fmt, ...) NSLog((@"%s [Line %d] " fmt), __PRETTY_FUNCTION__, __LINE__, ##__VA_ARGS__);
#ifdef DEBUG
#   define ULog(fmt, ...)  { UIAlertView *alert = [[UIAlertView alloc] initWithTitle:[NSString stringWithFormat:@"%s\n [Line %d] ", __PRETTY_FUNCTION__, __LINE__] message:[NSString stringWithFormat:fmt, ##__VA_ARGS__]  delegate:nil cancelButtonTitle:@"Ok" otherButtonTitles:nil]; [alert show]; }
#else
#   define ULog(...)
#endif

This is what it looks like:

Debug UIAlertView

+1 Diederik

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ULog is a very nice addition. Helpful when not hooked up to Xcode – Daniel Amitay Aug 10 '11 at 21:38
I'm going to extend my ALog+DLog code with ULog as well. Very useful. – neoneye Sep 15 '11 at 14:34
I think there is an autorelease missing on the alert. – neoneye Sep 15 '11 at 14:35
4  
No autorelease is not missing, it is intended to work with ARC which will become the most common coding practice going forward. ARC Works with all iOS 4 and iOS 5 versions. iOS 3.x and older will require autorelease. – Lee - Slalom Sep 15 '11 at 23:48
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NSLog(@"%s %d %s %s", __FILE__, __LINE__, __PRETTY_FUNCTION__, __FUNCTION__);

Outputs file name, line number, and function name:

/proj/cocoa/cdcli/cdcli.m 121 managedObjectContext managedObjectContext

__FUNCTION__ in C++ shows mangled name __PRETTY_FUNCTION__ shows nice function name, in cocoa they look the same.

I'm not sure what is the proper way of disabling NSLog, I did:

#define NSLog

And no logging output showed up, however I don't know if this has any side effects.

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Here one big collection of debug constants that we use. Enjoy.

// Uncomment the defitions to show additional info.

//  #define DEBUG

//  #define DEBUGWHERE_SHOWFULLINFO

//  #define DEBUG_SHOWLINES
//  #define DEBUG_SHOWFULLPATH
//  #define DEBUG_SHOWSEPARATORS
//  #define DEBUG_SHOWFULLINFO


// Definition of DEBUG functions. Only work if DEBUG is defined.
#ifdef DEBUG 

    #define debug_separator() NSLog( @"────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────" );

    #ifdef DEBUG_SHOWSEPARATORS
    	#define debug_showSeparators() debug_separator();
    #else
    	#define debug_showSeparators()
    #endif

    /// /// /// ////// ///// 

    #ifdef DEBUG_SHOWFULLPATH
    	#define debug_whereFull() debug_showSeparators(); NSLog(@"Line:%d : %s : %s", __LINE__,__FILE__,__FUNCTION__); debug_showSeparators(); 
    #else
    	#define debug_whereFull() debug_showSeparators(); NSLog(@"Line:%d : %s : %s", __LINE__,[ [ [ [NSString alloc] initWithBytes:__FILE__ length:strlen(__FILE__) encoding:NSUTF8StringEncoding] lastPathComponent] UTF8String ] ,__FUNCTION__); debug_showSeparators(); 
    #endif

    /// /// /// ////// ///// 

    #define debugExt(args,...) debug_separator(); debug_whereFull(); NSLog( args, ##__VA_ARGS__); debug_separator();

    /// /// /// ////// ///// Debug Print Macros

    #ifdef DEBUG_SHOWFULLINFO
    	#define debug(args,...) debugExt(args, ##__VA_ARGS__);
    #else
    	#ifdef DEBUG_SHOWLINES
    		#define debug(args,...) debug_showSeparators(); NSLog([ NSString stringWithFormat:@"Line:%d : %@", __LINE__, args ], ##__VA_ARGS__); debug_showSeparators();
    	#else
    		#define debug(args,...) debug_showSeparators(); NSLog(args, ##__VA_ARGS__); debug_showSeparators();
    	#endif
    #endif

    /// /// /// ////// ///// Debug Specific Types

    #define debug_object( arg ) debug( @"Object: %@", arg );
    #define debug_int( arg ) debug( @"integer: %i", arg );
    #define debug_float( arg ) debug( @"float: %f", arg );
    #define debug_rect( arg ) debug( @"CGRect ( %f, %f, %f, %f)", arg.origin.x, arg.origin.y, arg.size.width, arg.size.height );
    #define debug_point( arg ) debug( @"CGPoint ( %f, %f )", arg.x, arg.y );
    #define debug_bool( arg ) 	debug( @"Boolean: %@", ( arg == YES ? @"YES" : @"NO" ) );

    /// /// /// ////// ///// Debug Where Macros

    #ifdef DEBUGWHERE_SHOWFULLINFO
    	#define debug_where() debug_whereFull(); 
    #else
    	#define debug_where() debug(@"%s",__FUNCTION__); 
    #endif

    #define debug_where_separators() debug_separator(); debug_where(); debug_separator();

    /// /// /// ////// /////

#else
    #define debug(args,...) 
    #define debug_separator()  
    #define debug_where()   
    #define debug_where_separators()  
    #define debug_whereFull()   
    #define debugExt(args,...)
    #define debug_object( arg ) 
    #define debug_int( arg ) 
    #define debug_rect( arg ) 	
    #define debug_bool( arg ) 	
    #define debug_point( arg )
    #define debug_float( arg )
#endif
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4  
There is much obsolete code in there, like debug_rect, you should use NSStringFromCGRect etc... – steipete Jan 9 '11 at 18:10
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My answer to this question might help, looks like it's similar to the one Diederik cooked up. You may also want to replace the call to NSLog() with a static instance of your own custom logging class, that way you can add a priority flag for debug/warning/error messages, send messages to a file or database as well as the console, or pretty much whatever else you can think of.

#define DEBUG_MODE

#ifdef DEBUG_MODE
    #define DebugLog( s, ... ) NSLog( @"<%p %@:(%d)> %@", self, [[NSString stringWithUTF8String:__FILE__] lastPathComponent], __LINE__, [NSString stringWithFormat:(s), ##__VA_ARGS__] )
#else
    #define DebugLog( s, ... ) 
#endif
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To complement the answers above, it can be quite useful to use a replacement for NSLog in certain situations, especially when debugging. For example, getting rid of all the date and process name/id information on each line can make output more readable and faster to boot.

The following link provides quite a bit of useful ammo for making simple logging much nicer.

http://cocoaheads.byu.edu/wiki/a-different-nslog

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Disabling all NSLogs, for somebody allergic to MACROS, here is something that you can compile too:

void SJLog(NSString *format,...)
{
    if(LOG)
    {   
        va_list args;
        va_start(args,format);
        NSLogv(format, args);
        va_end(args);
    }
}

And, use it almost like NSLog:

SJLog(@"bye bye NSLogs !");

From this blog: http://whackylabs.com/blog/?p=134

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New addition to DLog. Instead of totally removing debug from released application, only disable it. When user has problems, which would require debugging, just tell how to enable debug in released application and request log data via email.

Short version: create global variable (yes, lazy and simple solution) and modify DLog like this:

BOOL myDebugEnabled = FALSE;
#define DLog(fmt, ...) if (myDebugEnabled) NSLog((@"%s [Line %d] " fmt), __PRETTY_FUNCTION__, __LINE__, ##__VA_ARGS__);

Longer answer at Jomnius iLessons iLearned: How to Do Dynamic Debug Logging in Released Application

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There are a new trick that no answer give. You can use printf instead NSLog. This will give you a clean log:

With NSLog you get things like this:

2011-11-03 13:43:55.632 myApp[3739:207] Hello Word

But with printf you get only:

Hello World

Use this code

#ifdef DEBUG
    #define NSLog(FORMAT, ...) fprintf(stderr,"%s\n", [[NSString stringWithFormat:FORMAT, ##__VA_ARGS__] UTF8String]);
#else
    #define NSLog(...)
#endif
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