I have some NSDictionary
objects stored in an NSArray
called telephoneArray
. I fetch the values for the key number
and then replace the NSDictionary
I've just read with a new object at the same index in the array. I then want to put these new objects into an NSSet
. How can this be achieved? See my unsuccessful attempt below.
// Add all telephones to this branch
for (int i=0; i<[telephoneArray count]; i++) {
[newTelephone setBranch:newBranch];
[newTelephone setNumber:[[telephoneArr开发者_Go百科ay objectAtIndex:i] valueForKey:@"number"]];
NSLog(@"%@",[[telephoneArray objectAtIndex:i] valueForKey:@"number"]);
[telephoneArray replaceObjectAtIndex:i withObject:newTelephone];
NSLog(@"phone number %i = %@",i,[[telephoneArray objectAtIndex:i] valueForKey:@"number"]);
}
NSSet *telephoneSet = [NSSet setWithArray:telephoneArray];
NSLog(@"telephoneArray=%i",[telephoneArray count]);
NSLog(@"telephoneSet=%i",[[telephoneSet allObjects] count]);
OUTPUT:
2010-03-06 03:06:02.824 AIB[5160:6507] 063 81207
2010-03-06 03:06:02.824 AIB[5160:6507] phone number 0 = 063 81207
2010-03-06 03:06:02.825 AIB[5160:6507] 063 81624
2010-03-06 03:06:02.825 AIB[5160:6507] phone number 1 = 063 81624
2010-03-06 03:06:02.825 AIB[5160:6507] 063 81714
2010-03-06 03:06:02.826 AIB[5160:6507] phone number 2 = 063 81714
2010-03-06 03:06:02.826 AIB[5160:6507] 063 81715
2010-03-06 03:06:02.826 AIB[5160:6507] phone number 3 = 063 81715
2010-03-06 03:06:02.826 AIB[5160:6507] telephoneArray=4
2010-03-06 03:06:02.827 AIB[5160:6507] telephoneSet=1
With the code above, telephoneArray can have a count of between 1 and 5 but telephoneSet always has a value of 1. I assume there's an obvious mistake but I can't see where.
This is not correct:
NSSet *telephoneSet = [[NSSet alloc] init];
[telephoneSet setByAddingObjectsFromArray:telephoneArray];
That method returns an NSSet which you are doing nothing with (it doesn't add the objects to telephoneSet, it creates a new NSSet). Do this instead:
NSSet *telephoneSet = [NSSet setWithArray:telephoneArray]
Also, note that a set cannot contain duplicates unlike an array. So if you have duplicate objects in your array and you put them in a set, the duplicates will be removed which can affect the object count.
Initially telephoneArray
contains references to n
distinct objects. After the loop ends, it does contain n
references, but each one is pointing to the same newTelephone
object.
Array can contain duplicates, so it doesn't matter. A Set cannot have duplicates, and your entire telephoneArray is composed of a single object basically, so you're seeing just one.
In your loop, you have to create a new object or get a telephone object from somewhere:
for (int i=0; i<[telephoneArray count]; i++) {
// Create the new object first, or get it from somewhere.
Telephone *newTelephone = [[Telephone alloc] init];
[newTelephone setBranch:newBranch];
[newTelephone setNumber:[[telephoneArray objectAtIndex:i] valueForKey:@"number"]];
[telephoneArray replaceObjectAtIndex:i withObject:newTelephone];
// the array holds a reference, so you could let go of newTelephone
[newTelephone release];
}
Also, like PCWiz said, you don't need to allocate a new NSSet
object in your case. Just call the class method setWithArray:
.
NSSet *telephoneSet = [NSSet setWithArray:telephoneArray]
Swift 3 Version
You can create a new NSSet from an array with:
let mySet = NSSet(array : myArray)
Additionally, you can add objects from an array to an already existing NSMutableSet with.
myMutableSet = myMutableSet.addingObjects(from: myArray)
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