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I'm following the "Your Second iOS App" and I decided to play with the code to understand Objective C well...

What I'm trying to do is simply adding an object to a mutable array in a class. Here are the classes:

BirdSighting.h

#import <Foundation/Foundation.h>

@interface BirdSighting : NSObject
@property (nonatomic, copy) NSString *name;
@property (nonatomic, copy) NSString *location;
@property (nonatomic, copy) NSDate *date;

-(id) initWithName: (NSString *) name location:(NSString *) location date:(NSDate *) date;
@end

BirdSighting.m

#import "BirdSighting.h"

@implementation BirdSighting
-(id) initWithName:(NSString *)name location:(NSString *)location date:(NSDate *)date
{
    self = [super init];

    if(self) {
        _name = name;
        _location = location;
        _date = date;

        return self;
    }

    return nil;
}

@end

BirdSightingDataController.h

#import <Foundation/Foundation.h>
@class BirdSighting;

@interface BirdSightingDataController : NSObject
@property (nonatomic, copy) NSMutableArray *masterBirdSightingList;

- (NSUInteger) countOfList;
- (BirdSighting *) objectInListAtIndex: (NSUInteger) theIndex;
- (void) addBirdSightingWithSighting: (BirdSighting *) sighting;
@end

BirdSightingDataController.m

#import "BirdSightingDataController.h"

@implementation BirdSightingDataController
- (id) init {
    if(self = [super init]) {
        NSMutableArray *sightingList = [[NSMutableArray alloc] init];
        self.masterBirdSightingList = sightingList;
        return self;
    }

    return nil;
}

-(NSUInteger) countOfList 
{
    return [self.masterBirdSightingList count];
}

- (BirdSighting *) objectInListAtIndex: (NSUInteger) theIndex
{
    return [self.masterBirdSightingList objectAtIndex:theIndex];
}

- (void) addBirdSightingWithSighting: (BirdSighting *) sighting
{
    [self.masterBirdSightingList addObject:sighting];
}
@end

And this is where I'm trying to add a BirdSighting instance to the mutable array:

#import "BirdsMasterViewController.h"
#import "BirdsDetailViewController.h"

#import "BirdSightingDataController.h"
#import "BirdSighting.h"

@implementation BirdsMasterViewController

- (void)awakeFromNib
{
    [super awakeFromNib];

    BirdSightingDataController *dataController = [[BirdSightingDataController alloc] init];

    NSDate *date = [NSDate date];
    BirdSighting *sighting = [[[BirdSighting alloc] init] initWithName:@"Ebabil" location:@"Ankara" date: date];

    [dataController addBirdSightingWithSighting: sighting];
    NSLog(@"dataController: %@", dataController.masterBirdSightingList);

    self.dataController = dataController;

}
..........
@end

It throws NSInvalidArgumentException in BirdSightingDataController addBirdSightingWithSighting method...

What am I doing wrong?

This is the full debug output: 2012-11-26 01:22:38.495 BirdWatching[4597:c07] -[__NSArrayI addObject:]: unrecognized selector sent to instance 0x71899d0 2012-11-26 01:22:38.496 BirdWatching[4597:c07] * Terminating app due to uncaught exception 'NSInvalidArgumentException', reason: '-[__NSArrayI addObject:]: unrecognized selector sent to instance 0x71899d0'

2
  • 1
    What's the rest of the error? The log should provide more details about the invalid argument exception. I'm guessing you are trying to add a nil reference to the array.
    – rmaddy
    Nov 25, 2012 at 23:11
  • Well I checked it with the debugger, it's not nil.
    – madpoet
    Nov 25, 2012 at 23:25

2 Answers 2

2

This line:

BirdSighting *sighting = [[[BirdSighting alloc] init] initWithName:@"Ebabil" location:@"Ankara" date: date];

should be:

BirdSighting *sighting = [[BirdSighting alloc] initWithName:@"Ebabil" location:@"Ankara" date: date];

You can't call two initializers.

Update:

Based on the complete error message I now see the problem. The NSMutableArray you think you have for the property is really an NSArray. This is caused by defining the property with copy.

When you define copy for a property, it makes an immutable copy of the object. So when you assign your NSMutableArray, an immutable copy is made and then assigned to the instance variable. So you end up assigning an NSArray, not an NSMutableArray.

A fix is to change the property definition from:

@property (nonatomic, copy) NSMutableArray *masterBirdSightingList;

to:

@property (nonatomic, strong) NSMutableArray *masterBirdSightingList;
2
  • I knew I'm missing smt. stupid :) However I'm still getting the same error after fixing it as you described.
    – madpoet
    Nov 25, 2012 at 23:28
  • @HotLicks I just updated my answer based on the complete error message.
    – rmaddy
    Nov 25, 2012 at 23:31
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If you read the error message it says that "addObject" was "sent" to NSArray, and that was invalid. Which is true. If you look at the spec for NSArray you will not find a method "addObject".

Somewhere you have an NSArray that you're trying to perform "addObject" on. Kind of hard to tell where, since you apparently didn't list the section of code where the error occurs, or else you're somewhere setting "masterBirdSightingList" to an NSArray, after first making it an NSMutableArray.

4
  • Ah, as maddy points out, you made the property "copy", which causes strange behavior.
    – Hot Licks
    Nov 25, 2012 at 23:36
  • Its a shame the semantics of copy on a property isn't adjusted to mutableCopy if the property's type is clearly mutable.
    – rmaddy
    Nov 25, 2012 at 23:38
  • Yeah, that one would likely burn me. Would never have noticed it if you hadn't mentioned it. (But then I've never found much use for copy.)
    – Hot Licks
    Nov 26, 2012 at 0:24
  • I learned this a while ago from first hand experience :) The rare times I use copy with a mutable type property, I write my own setter to get mutableCopy semantics.
    – rmaddy
    Nov 26, 2012 at 0:28

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