How do I convert NSMutableArray to NSArray in objective-c?
问题:
回答1:
NSArray *array = [mutableArray copy];
Copy
makes immutable copies. This is quite useful because Apple can make various optimizations. For example sending copy
to a immutable array only retains the object and returns self
.
If you don't use garbage collection or ARC remember that -copy
retains the object.
回答2:
An NSMutableArray
is a subclass of NSArray
so you won't always need to convert but if you want to make sure that the array can't be modified you can create a NSArray
either of these ways depending on whether you want it autoreleased or not:
/* Not autoreleased */
NSArray *array = [[NSArray alloc] initWithArray:mutableArray];
/* Autoreleased array */
NSArray *array = [NSArray arrayWithArray:mutableArray];
EDIT: The solution provided by Georg Schölly is a better way of doing it and a lot cleaner, especially now that we have ARC and don't even have to call autorelease.
回答3:
I like both of the 2 main solutions:
NSArray *array = [NSArray arrayWithArray:mutableArray];
Or
NSArray *array = [mutableArray copy];
The primary difference I see in them is how they behave when mutableArray is nil:
NSMutableArray *mutableArray = nil;
NSArray *array = [NSArray arrayWithArray:mutableArray];
// array == @[] (empty array)
NSMutableArray *mutableArray = nil;
NSArray *array = [mutableArray copy];
// array == nil
回答4:
you try this code---
NSMutableArray *myMutableArray = [myArray mutableCopy];
and
NSArray *myArray = [myMutableArray copy];
回答5:
In objective-c :
NSArray *myArray = [myMutableArray copy];
In swift :
var arr = myMutableArray as NSArray
回答6:
Objective-C
Below is way to convert NSMutableArray to NSArray:
//oldArray is having NSMutableArray data-type.
//Using Init with Array method.
NSArray *newArray1 = [[NSArray alloc]initWithArray:oldArray];
//Make copy of array
NSArray *newArray2 = [oldArray copy];
//Make mutablecopy of array
NSArray *newArray3 = [oldArray mutableCopy];
//Directly stored NSMutableArray to NSArray.
NSArray *newArray4 = oldArray;
Swift
In Swift 3.0 there is new data type Array. Declare Array using let
keyword then it would become NSArray And if declare using var
keyword then it's become NSMutableArray.
Sample code:
let newArray = oldArray as Array
回答7:
If you're constructing an array via mutability and then want to return an immutable version, you can simply return the mutable array as an "NSArray" via inheritance.
- (NSArray *)arrayOfStrings {
NSMutableArray *mutableArray = [NSMutableArray array];
mutableArray[0] = @"foo";
mutableArray[1] = @"bar";
return mutableArray;
}
If you "trust" the caller to treat the (technically still mutable) return object as an immutable NSArray, this is a cheaper option than [mutableArray copy]
.
Apple concurs:
To determine whether it can change a received object, the receiver of a message must rely on the formal type of the return value. If it receives, for example, an array object typed as immutable, it should not attempt to mutate it. It is not an acceptable programming practice to determine if an object is mutable based on its class membership.
The above practice is discussed in more detail here:
Best Practice: Return mutableArray.copy or mutableArray if return type is NSArray
回答8:
NSArray *array = mutableArray;
This [mutableArray copy]
antipattern is all over sample code. Stop doing so for throwaway mutable arrays that are transient and get deallocated at the end of the current scope.
There is no way the runtime could optimize out the wasteful copying of a mutable array that is just about to go out of scope, decrefed to 0 and deallocated for good.
回答9:
i was search for the answer in swift 3 and this question was showed as first result in search and i get inspired the answer from it so here is the swift 3 code
let array: [String] = nsMutableArrayObject.copy() as! [String]