I know I can create an NSArray
with @[@"foo", @"bar"]
or an NSDictionary
with @{@0 : @"foo", @1 : @"bar"}
.
Is there a literal syntax for creating an NSMutableArray
or an NSMutableDictionary
?
There isn't a built in way, but I just usually use mutableCopy
like this:
NSMutableArray *array = [@[ @"1", @"2", @"3" ] mutableCopy];
[NSMutableArray arrayWithObjects:@"1", @"2", @"3", nil]
.
Sep 19, 2012 at 1:19
+[NSArray arrayWithObjects:count:]
, not arrayWithObjects
so the literal syntax validates that all items are non-nil.
Jul 29, 2013 at 17:31
NSMutableArray *array = @[].mutableCopy;
which seems more readable.
No. Just as how there isn't a syntax for creating an NSMutableString
either. Mutable objects are not particularly suited to literal values.
NSMutableArray *list = [@[] mutableCopy];
i.e. you add mutableCopy at the end. That is how the literal is specified
But, is there a literal syntax for creating an NSMutableArray or an NSMutableDictionary?
No. Best alternative:
[@[ @"foo", @"bar"] mutableCopy]
Yes. But not quite. Take a look at this;
NSMutableArray *list = [@[] mutableCopy];
This creates a non-mutable array @[]
and calls mutableCopy
which returns a NSMutableArray *
. In place of @[]
, you can give any array literal.
If you have a nested literal of arrays and dictionaries, you can turn this into a fully mutable version by going through NSJSONSerialization
. For example:
NSArray* array = @[ @{ @"call" : @{ @"devices" : @[ @"$(devices)" ] } } ];
NSData* data = [NSJSONSerialization dataWithJSONObject:array
options:0
error:nil];
NSJSONReadingOptions options = NSJSONReadingMutableContainers |
NSJSONReadingMutableLeaves;
NSMutableArray* mutableArray = [NSJSONSerialization JSONObjectWithData:data
options:options
error:nil];
It's a bit of a detour, but at least you don't have to write out the code yourself. And the good thing is that NSJSONSerialization
is very fast.
-mutableCopy
only does a shallow copy. The only way is to do something 'circuitous'.
Jul 12, 2013 at 4:48
@[ @{ @"call" : @{ @"devices" : @[ @"$(devices)" ] } } ]
and you'll see how insane that is. Second, this works for the types given in @MattDiPasquale's and my example. Even more, I explicitly mention that this works for literals. So please don't apologise!
Apr 26, 2014 at 5:14
NSDictionary *dictionary = @{@"key" : @"value"};
, might be confusing with he way you have it written. Different from:objectsWithKeys
.