This might be very basic question but I was wondering why can't I assign nil as NSDictionary value? I have following statement many places in my code. If [q objectForKey:@"text"]
is nil then App is crashing.
NSMutableDictionary *dict = [[NSMutableDictionary alloc] initWithCapacity:2];
[dict setObject:[q objectForKey:@"text"] forKey:@"text"];
I have to check everywhere for the nil before assigning it to dictionary. Is this the only correct way of doing? Am I missing something obvious?
if([q objectForKey:@"text"] != nil)
[dict setObject:[q objectForKey:@"text"] forKey:@"text"];
else
[dict setObject:@"" forKey:@"text"];
It wants an actual object... use NSNull
You can set a nil value using setValue:forKey
but it removes the key.
If you want to be able to set a key to nil
you could use setValue:forKey:
which will remove the key if you set it to nil
(quote from documentation below). Note the Value instead of Object.
setValue:forKey:
Adds a given key-value pair to the dictionary.
...
Discussion
This method adds value and key to the dictionary using setObject:forKey:
, unless value is nil
in which case the method instead attempts to remove key using removeObjectForKey:
.
When you later try and get the object using objectForKey:
for the key that you removed by setting it to nil
you will get nil
back (quote from documentation below).
Return value:
The value associated with aKey, or nil if no value is associated with aKey.
Note: The key will not actually be present in the dictionary so it won't be obtained using allKeys
; or be enumerated over.
You can set nil object in this way:
NSMutableDictionary *dictionary = [NSMutableDictionary dictionary];
dictionary[@“key”] = nil;
Have you noticed it?
NSMutableDictionary *dictionary = [NSMutableDictionary dictionary];
/* this statement is safe to execute */
dictionary[@“key”] = nil;
/* but this statement will crash application */
[dictionary setObject:nil forKey:@"key"];
When using this method:
func setObject(_ anObject: Any, forKey aKey: NSCopying)
Parameters (according to Apple doc's):
anObject:
Raises an invalidArgumentException if anObject is nil. If you need
to represent a nil value in the dictionary, use NSNull .
aKey
Raises an invalidArgumentException if aKey is nil.
My friend using nil as marker is a sign of bad programming . nil is reserved for some diffrent purpose .
if([q objectForKey:@"text"] != nil)
[dict setObject:[q objectForKey:@"text"] forKey:@"text"];
else
[dict removeObjectforKey:@"text"]; // this will do nothing if key does not exsist.
//by default for all the keys the value is nil and you are trying to override this behavior.
going against the language rules will always get you in trouble .
to check just use
if([dict objectforKey:@"text"] !=nil){} // this will work becuase default value is nil
itself