10

NSRange is just a C struct. I want to create a temporary one in lldb in Xcode at a breakpoint.

Specifically for use in NSArray method objectAtIndex:inRange:

This does not work.

(lldb) expr NSRange $tmpRange = (NSRange){0,4}
(lldb) expr $tmpRange
(NSRange) $tmpRange = location=0, length=4
(lldb) expr -o -- [items indexOfObject:item4 inRange:$tmpRange]
error: no matching constructor for initialization of 'NSRange' (aka '_NSRange')
error: 1 errors parsing expression

My code has an NSRange var named badRange at the breakpoint, and passing that one in works. Thus:

(lldb) expr -o -- [items indexOfObject:item4 inRange:badRange]
0x7fffffffffffffff
(lldb) expr badRange
(NSRange) $1 = location=0, length=3

What is going on?

Thanks.

8
  • Someone was talking about that specific error on the LLVM mailing list in 2013. Sadly, the answer seems to be "file a bug".
    – Jeff
    Apr 24, 2015 at 13:13
  • Submitted bug 20684329 at bugreport.apple.com
    – Jeff
    Apr 24, 2015 at 13:48
  • It seems to work just fine with Xcode 6.3.1.
    – Dalzhim
    Apr 28, 2015 at 1:38
  • Interesting. I am trying it right now in Xcode 6.3.1 (6D1002) and I get the same "no matching constructor" error. Some setting difference we have?
    – Jeff
    Apr 28, 2015 at 15:09
  • 1
    You are absolutely right. I tried creating an iOS project and I wasn't able to create a NSRange in the debugger. In fact I searched in the iOS frameworks and even though Foundation provides the header file in which the struct is declared, it doesn't expose any corresponding symbol. Basically, on iOS, NSRange is just a forward declaration and I do not know the real symbol for the implementation.
    – Dalzhim
    Apr 29, 2015 at 3:31

2 Answers 2

4

Creating a NSRange in the debugger works fine when working in a OS X project but it doesn't for iOS projects. The reason it doesn't work on iOS is that even though Foundation provides the header file in which the struct is declared, it doesn't expose any corresponding symbol. Basically, on iOS, NSRange is just a forward declaration and I do not know the real symbol for the implementation.

4

I needed to create an NSRange recently whilst trying to debug some code and came across this thread. It is currently possible to do this for iOS projects using Xcode 8.3.2 with the following syntax.

po [@"test words here" stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString:@"\\s" withString:@"" options:1024 range:(NSRange){0,15}]

This also works:

expr NSRange $tmpRange = (NSRange){0,15}
po [@"test words here" stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString:@"\\s" withString:@"" options:1024 range:(NSRange)$tmpRange]

Not sure when this was fixed (or if it ever was, as leaving off (NSRange) on the second example results in the same error), but it works now.

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