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method with 2 return values

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2023-01-03 22:36 出处:网络
I want to call a method which开发者_开发技巧 returns two values basically lets say my method is like the below (want to return 2 values)

I want to call a method which开发者_开发技巧 returns two values

basically lets say my method is like the below (want to return 2 values)

NSString* myfunc
{
   NSString *myString = @"MYDATA";
   NSString *myString2 = @"MYDATA2";
   return myString;
   return myString2;        
}

So when i call it, i would use??

NSString* Value1 = [self myfunc:mystring];
NSString* Value2 = [self myfunc:mystring2];

I guess im doing something wrong with it, can anyone help me out? Thanks


You can only return 1 value. That value can be a struct or an object or a simple type. If you return a struct or object it can contain multiple values.

The other way to return multiple values is with out parameters. Pass by reference or pointer in C.

Here is a code snippet showing how you could return a struct containing two NSStrings:

typedef struct {
    NSString* str1;
    NSString* str2;
} TwoStrings;

TwoStrings myfunc(void) {
    TwoStrings result;
    result.str1 = @"data";
    result.str2 = @"more";
    return result;
}

And call it like this:

TwoStrings twoStrs = myfunc();
NSLog(@"str1 = %@, str2 = %@", twoStrs.str1, twoStrs.str2);

You need to be careful with memory management when returning pointers even if they are wrapped inside a struct. In Objective-C the convention is that functions return autoreleased objects (unless the method name starts with create/new/alloc/copy).


You have a few options:

  • NSArray: Just return an array. Pretty simple.
  • Pointers: Pass in two pointers, and write to them instead of returning anything. Make sure to check for NULL!
  • Structure: Create a struct that has two fields, one for each thing you want to return, and return one of that struct.
  • Object: Same a structure, but create a full NSObject subclass.
  • NSDictionary: Similar to NSArray, but removes the need to use magic ordering of the values.


As you can only return one value/object, maybe wrap them up in an array:

-(NSArray*) arrayFromMyFunc
{
   NSString *myString = @"MYDATA";
   NSString *myString2 = @"MYDATA2";
   return [NSArray arrayWithObjects:myString,myString2,nil];
}

You can then use it like this:

NSArray *arr = [self arrayFromMyFunc];

NSString *value1 = [arr objectAtIndex:0];
NSString *value2 = [arr objectAtIndex:1];

You could pass results back by reference, but this is easy to get wrong (syntactically, semantically, and from memory management point of view).

Edit One more thing: Make sure that you really need two return values. If they are quite independent, two separate function are often the better choice - better reusabilty and mentainable. Just in case you are making this as a matter of premature optimization. :-)


You can only directly return one value from a function. But there is a way of doing it.

-(void) myfuncWithVal1:(NSString**)val1 andVal2:(NSString**)val2
{
  *val1 = @"MYDATA";
  *val2 = @"MYDATA2";
}

Then to call it outside the method you'd use:

NSString* a;
NSString* b;

[self myfuncWithVal1:&a andVal2:&b];


void myfunc(NSString **string1, NSString **string2)
{
    *string1 = @"MYDATA";
    *string2 = @"MYDATA2";
}

...

NSString *value1, *value2;
myfunc(&value1, &value2);

Remember that you need to pass a pointer to a pointer when working with strings and other objects.


Wrap the two strings in an NSArray:

- (NSArray*)myFunc
{
   NSString *myString = @"MYDATA";
   NSString *myString2 = @"MYDATA2";
   return [NSArray arrayWithObjects:myString, myString2, nil];
}

NSArray *theArray = [self myFunc]
NSString *value1 = [theArray objectAtIndex:0];
NSString *value2 = [theArray] objectAtIndex:1];


I see everyone has mentioned an NSArray but I'd go with an NSDictionary so the values don't have to be added in order or even at all. This means it is able to handle a situation where you only want to return the second string.

- (NSDictionary*)myFunction {

   NSString *myString1 = @"string1";
   NSString *myString2 = @"string2";

   return [NSDictionary dictionaryWithObjectsAndKeys: myString1, @"key1", myString2, @"key2", nil];
}

NSDictionary *myDictionary = [self myFunction]
NSString *string1 = [myDictionary objectForKey:@"key1"];
NSString *string2 = [myDictionary objectForKey:@"key2"];
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