I am setting a json output like below. It is a NSString.
MyNSString = {
title = FirstOne;
titleno = 95;
}
MyNSString = {
title = SecondOne;
titleno = 96;
}
I have to add like the above json multiple strings into an NSArray (or) NSMutableArray. I am trying to add in NSMutableArray. When i want to add like the above json string into an NSMutableArray, the output comes like below, with \n .
[outNSMutableArray addObject:[NSString stringWithFormat:#"%#", MyNSString] ];
(
"{\n \"title\" : \"FirstOne\",\n \"titleno\" : \"95\"\n}",
"{\n \"title\" : \"SecondOne\",\n \"titleno\" : \"96\"\n}"
)
I want this to be like below, without "\n \" added.
[ {"title":"FirstOne","titleno":95},{"title":"SecondOne","titleno":96}]
How can i correct this? Could someone help?
NSString* string = [myJSONString stringByReplacingOccurencesOfString: #"\n" withString: #""];
EDIT:
So you have this:
[outNSMutableArray addObject:[NSString stringWithFormat:#"%#", MyNSString] ];
Change it to this:
NSString* str = [MyNSString stringByReplacingOccurencesOfString: #"\n" withString: #""];
[outNSMutableArray addObject:[NSString stringWithFormat:#"%#", str] ];
Related
I have a string like: "mocktail, wine, beer"
How can I convert this into: "mocktail", "wine", "beer"?
the following gives you the desired result:
NSString *_inputString = #"\"mocktail, wine, beer\"";
NSLog(#"input string : %#", _inputString);
NSLog(#"output string : %#", [_inputString stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString:#", " withString:#"\", \""]);
the result is:
input string : "mocktail, wine, beer"
output string : "mocktail", "wine", "beer"
You need to use:
NSArray * components = [myString componentsSeparatedByString: #", "];
NSString *string = #"mocktail, wine, beer";
//remove whitespaces
NSString *trimmedString = [string stringByTrimmingCharactersInSet:[NSCharacterSet whitespaceAndNewlineCharacterSet]];
//get array of string
NSArray *array = [trimmedString componentsSeparatedByString:#","];
NSMutableArray *newArray = [[NSMutableArray alloc] init];
for (NSString *trimmedString in array) {
NSString *newString = [NSMutableString stringWithFormat:#"'%#'", trimmedString];
[newArray addObject:newString];
}
//merge new strings
NSString *finalString = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%#", [newArray objectAtIndex:0]];
for (NSInteger i = 1; i < [newArray count]; i++) {
finalString = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%#, %#", finalString, [newArray objectAtIndex:i]];
}
Without knowing spesifically about iOS or objective-c, I assume you could use a split function.
In almost any higher level programming language there is such a function.
Try:
Objective-C split
This gets you an array of Strings. You can then practically do with those what you want to do, e.g. surrounding them with single quotes and appending them back together. :D
I want to create a comma-separated string like this.
NSString *list = #"iPhone,iPad,iPod";
I tried like this,
[strItemList appendString:[NSString stringWithFormat:#"%#,", [[arrItems objectAtIndex:i]objectForKey:#"ItemList"]]];
But the issue is I'm getting a string like this
#"iPhone,iPad,iPod," Note that there is an extra comma "," at the end of the string. How can I avoid that extra comma?
Can you please give me a hint. Highly appreciated
Thanks in advance
To join an array of strings into a single string by a separator (character which would be a string), you could use this method of NSArray class:
NSArray* array = #[#"iPhone", #"iPad", #"iPod"];
NSString* query = [array componentsJoinedByString:#","];
By using this method, you won't need to drop the last extra comma (or whatever) because it won't add it to the final string.
There's a couple of routes you can take.
If the number of items is always the same, and known before hand (which I guess isn't the case, but I mention it for completeness's sake), just make the whole string at once:
[NSString stringWithFormat:#"%#,%#,%#", [[arrItems objectAtIndex:0] objectForKey:#"ItemList"]], [[arrItems objectAtIndex:1] objectForKey:#"ItemList"]], [[arrItems objectAtIndex:2] objectForKey:#"ItemList"]]
Knowing that the unwanted comma will always be the last character in the string, you can make removing it the last step in construction:
} // End of loop
[strItemList removeCharactersInRange:(NSRange){[strItemList length] - 1, 1}];
Or you can change your thinking a little and do the loop like this:
NSString * comma = #"";
for( i = 0; i < [arrItems count]; i++ ){
[strItemList appendString:[NSString stringWithFormat:#"%#%#", comma, [[arrItems objectAtIndex:i]objectForKey:#"ItemList"]]];
comma = #",";
}
Notice that comma comes before the other item. Setting that string inside the loop means that nothing will be added on the first item, but a comma character will be for every other item.
After Completion of loop add below stmt
strItemList = [strItemList substringToIndex:[strItemList length]-1]
check the value of array count if array count is last then add without comma else add with comma. try this out i am not sure to much about.
if([arrItems objectAtIndex:i] == arrItems.count){
[strItemList appendString:[NSString stringWithFormat:#"%#", [[arrItems objectAtIndex:i]objectForKey:#"ItemList"]]];
}
else {
[strItemList appendString:[NSString stringWithFormat:#"%#,", [[arrItems objectAtIndex:i]objectForKey:#"ItemList"]]];
}
Assuming that arrItems is an NSArray with elements #"iPhone", #"iPad", and #"iPod", you can do this:
NSArray *list = [arrItems componentsJoinedByString:#","]
NSArray with elements #"iPhone", #"iPad", and #"iPod"
NSString *str=[[arrItems objectAtIndex:0]objectForKey:#"ItemList"]]
str = [str stringByAppendingFormat:#",%#",[[arrItems objectAtIndex:1]objectForKey:#"ItemList"]]];
str = [str stringByAppendingFormat:#",%#",[[arrItems objectAtIndex:2]objectForKey:#"ItemList"]]];
NsLog(#"%#",str);
// Assuming...
NSDictionary *dictionary1 = [NSDictionary dictionaryWithObject:[NSArray arrayWithObjects:#"iPhone", #"iPodTouch", nil] forKey:#"ItemList"];
NSDictionary *dictionary2 = [NSDictionary dictionaryWithObject:[NSArray arrayWithObjects:#"iPad", #"iPad2", #"Apple TV", nil] forKey:#"ItemList"];
NSDictionary *dictionary3 = [NSDictionary dictionaryWithObject:[NSArray arrayWithObjects:#"iMac", #"MacBook Pro", #"Mac Pro", nil] forKey:#"ItemList"];
NSArray *arrItems = [NSArray arrayWithObjects:dictionary1, dictionary2, dictionary3, nil];
// create string list
NSString *strItemList = [[arrItems valueForKeyPath:#"#unionOfArrays.ItemList"] componentsJoinedByString:#", "];
NSLog(#"All Items List: %#", strItemList);
Output:
All Items List: iPhone, iPodTouch, iPad, iPad2, Apple TV, iMac, MacBook Pro, Mac Pro
This method will return you the nsmutablestring with comma separated values from an array
-(NSMutableString *)strMutableFromArray:(NSMutableArray *)arr withSeperater:(NSString *)saperator
{
NSMutableString *strResult = [NSMutableString string];
for (int j=0; j<[arr count]; j++)
{
NSString *strBar = [arr objectAtIndex:j];
[strResult appendString:[NSString stringWithFormat:#"%#",strBar]];
if (j != [arr count]-1)
{
[strResult appendString:[NSString stringWithFormat:#"%#",seperator]];
}
}
return strResult;
}
I have a text view in which I want to display NSArray *result as text of the text view.
For eg:
result={#"home",#"Office",#"Park",#"Market",nil};
textView text should be:
home
office
park
market
for(int i =0 ; i <[Array Count] ;i++)
{
self.textView.text = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%# %#",self.textView.text, Array objectAtIndex:i];
}
Correct any spelling mistake.
You can use componentsJoinedByString: method, like this:
NSString *text = [result componentsJoinedByString:#" "];
You can use a different separator instead of #" ".
You can use a for loop as such:
NSString *str =#"";
for (NSString *tmp in result) {
str = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%# %#",str,tmp];
}
If you want each entry on a new line replace the space with "\n".
I have an NSString *str, having value #"I like Programming and gaming."
I have to remove "I" "like" & "and" from my string so it should look like as "Programming gaming"
How can I do this, any Idea?
NSString *newString = #"I like Programming and gaming.";
NSString *newString1 = [newString stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString:#"I" withString:#""];
NSString *newString12 = [newString1 stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString:#"like" withString:#""];
NSString *final = [newString12 stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString:#"and" withString:#""];
Assigned to wrong string variable edited now it is fine
NSLog(#"%#",final);
output : Programming gaming
NSString * newString = [#"I like Programming and gaming." stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString:#"I" withString:#""];
newString = [newString stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString:#"like" withString:#""];
newString = [newString stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString:#"and" withString:#""];
NSLog(#"%#", newString);
More efficient and maintainable than doing a bunch of stringByReplacing... calls in series:
NSSet* badWords = [NSSet setWithObjects:#"I", #"like", #"and", nil];
NSString* str = #"I like Programming and gaming.";
NSString* result = nil;
NSArray* parts = [str componentsSeparatedByString:#" "];
for (NSString* part in parts) {
if (! [badWords containsObject: part]) {
if (! result) {
//initialize result
result = part;
}
else {
//append to the result
result = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%# %#", result, part];
}
}
}
It is an old question, but I'd like to show my solution:
NSArray* badWords = #[#"the", #"in", #"and", #"&",#"by"];
NSMutableString* mString = [NSMutableString stringWithString:str];
for (NSString* string in badWords) {
mString = [[mString stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString:string withString:#""] mutableCopy];
}
return [NSString stringWithString:mString];
Make a mutable copy of your string (or initialize it as NSMutableString) and then use replaceOccurrencesOfString:withString:options:range: to replace a given string with #"" (empty string).
i have the text in a string as shown below
011597464952,01521545545,454545474,454545444|Hello this is were the message is.
Basically i would like each of the numbers in different strings to the message eg
NSString *Number1 = 011597464952
NSString *Number2 = 01521545545
etc
etc
NSString *Message = Hello this is were the message is.
i would like to have that split out from one string that contains it all
I would use -[NSString componentsSeparatedByString]:
NSString *str = #"011597464952,01521545545,454545474,454545444|Hello this is were the message is.";
NSArray *firstSplit = [str componentsSeparatedByString:#"|"];
NSAssert(firstSplit.count == 2, #"Oops! Parsed string had more than one |, no message or no numbers.");
NSString *msg = [firstSplit lastObject];
NSArray *numbers = [[firstSplit objectAtIndex:0] componentsSepratedByString:#","];
// print out the numbers (as strings)
for(NSString *currentNumberString in numbers) {
NSLog(#"Number: %#", currentNumberString);
}
Look at NSString componentsSeparatedByString or one of the similar APIs.
If this is a known fixed set of results, you can then take the resulting array and use it something like:
NSString *number1 = [array objectAtIndex:0];
NSString *number2 = [array objectAtIndex:1];
...
If it is variable, look at the NSArray APIs and the objectEnumerator option.
NSMutableArray *strings = [[#"011597464952,01521545545,454545474,454545444|Hello this is were the message is." componentsSeparatedByCharactersInSet:[NSCharacterSet characterSetWithCharactersInString:#",|"]] mutableCopy];
NString *message = [[strings lastObject] copy];
[strings removeLastObject];
// strings now contains just the number strings
// do what you need to do strings and message
....
[strings release];
[message release];
does objective-c have strtok()?
The strtok function splits a string into substrings based on a set of delimiters.
Each subsequent call gives the next substring.
substr = strtok(original, ",|");
while (substr!=NULL)
{
output[i++]=substr;
substr=strtok(NULL, ",|")
}
Here's a handy function I use:
///Return an ARRAY containing the exploded chunk of strings
///#author: khayrattee
///#uri: http://7php.com
+(NSArray*)explodeString:(NSString*)stringToBeExploded WithDelimiter:(NSString*)delimiter
{
return [stringToBeExploded componentsSeparatedByString: delimiter];
}