I was looking at NSTokenField, NSTextField and NSTextView with no luck to do the following:
I am writing a Twtitter client and when you want to twitter a new Tweet then you begin to write in a text field for example:
Going to make coffee, #pe
When you begin to write a # then I would like to help the user to autocomplete the username for example #peter. I have a NSArray with the usernames like:
NSArray *usernames = [NSArray arrayWithObjects:#"#andreas", #"#clara", #"#jeena", #"#peter"]
What should I do to enable a simple autocompletation? I'd be happy if you would have to press F5 or something for starters too. The problem I am having is that with NSTokenField I don't know how I should tokenize the string, with NSTextField it only works when I write the #username at the beginning of the tweet and NSTextView seems really complicated and too much for such a simple thing.
The most basic implementation involves overriding this method... Definitely not optimal, but you should get the idea:
- (NSArray *) completionsForPartialWordRange:(NSRange)charRange indexOfSelectedItem:(NSInteger *)index {
// this would be defined somewhere else, but just for example..
NSArray *usernames = [NSArray arrayWithObjects:#"#andreas", #"#clara", #"#jeena", #"#peter"];
NSMutableArray *matchedNames = [NSMutableArray array];
NSString *toMatch = [[self string] substringWithRange:charRange];
for(NSString *username in usernames) {
[matchedNames addObject:username];
}
return matchedNames; // that's it.
}
Once you start having a lot of data, you'll need to employ strategies to pre-do your searches by storing words into hashes with the partial pieces of text in them (like, "Hello" would be put into 4 different arrays stuff into NSDictionary keys for "H", "He", "Hel", "Hell" .. Repeat with every word in your Lexicon. Much quicker that way.
If you want to support auto-complete, just call the 'complete:' method when you detect text is changing in your control.
Related
I know there are a whole bunch of questions that have been asked and answered in stackoverflow about the challenge of getting keys in an NSDictionary sorted by putting those keys into sort order in an array. I understand that objects are not stored in sort order within the actual dictionary and that is, I think, for reasons of efficiency or maybe memory management on the part of Foundation code.
I have been working on trying out examples from several answers out here and in apple documentation and blogs (some I can get to work, others not!) , but I can't seem to find an example that solves my confusion.
I think my confusion is that the examples I'm encountering both here, in apple documentation and in the different helpful blogs, all seem to have examples where there is just a key value pair and the second value is not an object - it's more like just a value. (However isn't it really an object at some level? I would think it is)
One example, that I couldn't get to work (Sorting an NSArray by an NSDictionary value ) , uses this idea
[array sortedArrayUsingComparator:^(NSDictionary *item1, NSDictionary *item2) {
NSString *age1 = [item1 objectForKey:#"age"];
NSString *age2 = [item2 objectForKey:#"age"];
return [age1 compare:age2 options:NSNumericSearch];
}];
I thought maybe this idea, specifying the key in a more specific manner, might be my problem.
I wonder if maybe I'm not communicating to the compiler what the key is, and what the object is, and that is why I'm getting an "unrecognized selector sent to instance" error.
..... Code Snips Follow .....
1)
I have a class called "Dog". A given dog object has several properties, including an NSString key.
My key is "licenseString" is an alphanumeric key - I'm also wondering if I should use decimalNumberWithString but that's not the question here
#property (strong,nonatomic) NSString *licenseString;
#property (strong, nonatomic) NSString *dogName;
#property (strong, nonatomic) NSString *whatMakesDogSpecial;
#property (strong, nonatomic) UIImage *dogPhoto;
2) I have an NSDictionary
#property (nonatomic, strong) NSDictionary *dogDictionary;
I hardcode information into the dogDictionary in this not very sophisticated way,
Dog *aDog;
// Dog one
aDog = [[Dog alloc]init] ;
aDog.licenseString = #"1";
aDog.dogName = #"Oscar";
aDog.whatMakesDogSpecial = #"This animal was found at the Mid-Penn humane society. He is super friendly, plays well with other dogs and likes people too. He enjoys fetching balls and frisbees too. He also goes to the park daily." ;
aDog.dogPhoto = [UIImage imageNamed:#"webVuMiniAppDogOscar.jpg"];
[self.dogDictionary setValue:aDog forKey:aDog.licenseString];
3) Then once I have several dog objects in my dogDictionary, I want to sort on the license tag values, so that I can populate a table view with dog names, but by order of their license tags.
BTW it seems that the compiler does recognize "vars.dogDictionary" which appears in the code snip below, because when I look at the debugger I can see that two valid instances are coming up from my dog dictionary. The debugger output is in an attachment
So, using ideas from a stackoverflow answer and the apple documentation, I write this
NSArray *sortedKeys = [vars.dogDictionary keysSortedByValueUsingComparator:
^NSComparisonResult(id obj1, id obj2) {
return [obj1 compare:obj2];
}];
NSLog(#" The sorted array is %#", sortedKeys);
And that's where my problem happens. I recognize that 0x1182f740 refers to "obj1" as shown in the debugger attachment
2013-08-06 15:13:58.276 SortDogLIcenseTags[3876:11303] -[Dog compare:]: unrecognized selector sent to instance 0x1182f740
(lldb)
Attachment is a picture showing debugger values - they don't like to paste very well
Here's how I resolved this challenge. It works and was pretty straightforward to integrate into my Master/Detail project
I know I found a tutorial on the web somewhere that led me to this solution , I'm sorry I can't find it now.
Note that sortedDogDictionaryArray and dogDictionaryArray are declared as properties in the .h file.
self.dogDictionaryArray = [vars.dogDictionary allValues];
// Sort
NSSortDescriptor *sortDescriptorDog =
[[NSSortDescriptor alloc] initWithKey:#"licenseString" ascending:YES];
NSArray *sortDescriptorsDogs =
[NSArray arrayWithObject:sortDescriptorDog];
self.sortedDogDictionaryArray =
[self.dogDictionaryArray sortedArrayUsingDescriptors:sortDescriptorsDogs];
NSLog(#"%#",self.sortedDogDictionaryArray );
int doggie;
Dog *someDogName;
NSLog(#"Sorted Order is...");
for (doggie = 0; doggie < [self.sortedDogDictionaryArray count]; doggie++) {
//NSLog(#"%#", [sortedArray objectAtIndex:i]);
//NSLog(#"%#", [sortedArrayDogs objectAtIndex:doggie]);
someDogName = [self.sortedDogDictionaryArray objectAtIndex:doggie];
//NSLog(#"name is %#", someDogName.dogName);
NSLog(#"name is %# tag is %#", someDogName.dogName, someDogName.licenseString);
}
I'd like to improve this method if possible: this is a small section whereby all of the textfield (eyepiece, objectivelenses etc) texts are saved. Unfortunately, having to do this lots of times for each part of my app is prone to error so I would like to improve it. I'm thinking some sort of fast enumeration with arguments for the method being the textfields etc. and I can have all the keys in a dictionary (which is already set up). Just a pointer to the right docs or, perhaps, some sort of process that has worked for you would be fantastic!
-(IBAction)saveUserEntries {
if (eyepiece.text != nil) {
eyepieceString = [[NSString alloc] initWithFormat:eyepiece.text];
[eyepiece setText:eyepieceString];
NSUserDefaults *eyepieceDefault = [NSUserDefaults standardUserDefaults];
[eyepieceDefault setObject:eyepieceString forKey:#"eyepieceKey"];
}
else {
[[NSUserDefaults standardUserDefaults] removeObjectForKey:#"eyepieceKey"];
}
if (objectiveLenses.text != nil) {
objectiveLensString = [[NSString alloc] initWithFormat:objectiveLenses.text];
[objectiveLenses setText:objectiveLensString];
NSUserDefaults *objectiveDefault = [NSUserDefaults standardUserDefaults];
[objectiveDefault setObject:objectiveLensString forKey:#"objectiveKey"];
}
else {
[[NSUserDefaults standardUserDefaults] removeObjectForKey:#"objectiveKey"];
}
Thank you for taking the time to read this!
I will attempt to answer this question based on a OOP solution.
Create a method that accepts whatever type object these textboxes are as an argument, send the reference of said object to the method, and save the entry in a similar method you do know. This will avoid the "copy and paste" errors you are worried about.
You should be able to loop through every instance of said object that exists, if a cocoa application, works like similar to Java and .NET ( I really don't know ). I just know there must be a way to loop through every instance of a single object within the application domain.
If this was .NET I simply would suggest TextBox.Name and TextBox.String to make this a generic method that could be used to save the properties of any TextBox sent to it. If this doesn't anwer your question ( was a little long for a comment ) then I aplogize.
I have an NSTableview which s bound to a NSArrayController. The Table/Arraycontroller contains Core Data "Person" entities. The people are added to the NSTableview by the GUI's user.
Let's say a person entity looks like
NSString* Name;
int Age;
NSString* HairColor;
Now I want to iterate over what is stored in the array controller to perform some operation in it. The actual operation I want to do isn't important I don't really want to get bogged down in what I am trying to do with the information. It's just iterating over everything held in the NSArraycontroller which is confusing me. I come from a C++ and C# background and am new to Cocoa. Let's say I want to build a NSMutableArray that contains each person from nsarraycontroller 1 year in the future.
So I would want to do something like
NSMutableArray* mutArray = [[NSMutableArray alloc] init];
foreach(PersonEntity p in myNsArrayController) // foreach doesn't exist in obj-c
{
Person* new_person = [[Person alloc] init];
[new_person setName:p.name];
[new_person setHairColor:p.HairColor];
[new_person setAge:(p.age + 1)];
[mutArray addObject:new_person];
}
I believe the only thing holding me back from doing something like the code above is that foreach does not exist in Obj-c. I just don't see how to iterate over the nsarraycontroller.
Note: This is for OSX so I have garbage collection turned on
You're looking for fast enumeration.
For your example, something like
for (PersonEntity *p in myNsArrayController.arrangedObjects)
{
// Rest of your code
}
You can also enumerate using blocks. For example:
[myNsArrayController enumerateObjectsUsingBlock:^(id object, NSUInteger index, BOOL *stop)
{
PersonEntity *p = object;
// Rest of your code
}];
There's pro's and cons to both approaches. These are discussed in depth in the answer to this question:
Objective-C enumerateUsingBlock vs fast enumeration?
You can find a great tutorial on blocks in Apple's WWDC 2010 videos. In that they say that at Apple they use blocks "all the time".
So, having struggled with this for too long, without much documentation to go on, I thought I'd share my experience for those few who are even noobier than me.
There probably are much cleaner ways of achieving what I did, so please feel free to suggest improvements.
Here's what I wanted to do:
I have an NSArrayController which manages NSManagedObjects (say Thing). These objects have a name property which is of type NSString.
I wanted to sort the array of the array controller using the name of the managed objects. The common way to go about sorting a mutable array of strings should be something like:
[myMutableArrayOfStrings sortUsingSelector:#selector(caseInsensitiveCompare:)];
or:
NSSortDescriptor *sortDescriptor = [NSSortDescriptor sortDescriptorWithKey:#"name" ascending:YES selector:#selector(caseInsensitiveCompare:)];
NSArray *descriptorArray = [NSArray arrayWithObject:sortDescriptor];
[myArrayController setSortDescriptors:descriptorArray];
However, if the names happened to be numbers, caseInsensitiveCompare: would sort 11 before 8 (for instance).
Also, I wanted a name of a11b to be sorted AFTER a8b, meaning that I needed to chop the names of the managed objects into groups of digits and non-digit characters, then compare those individually.
What I came up with, was to make a category of NSString.
header file:
#import <Foundation/Foundation.h>
#interface NSString (MyString)
- (NSComparisonResult)myCustomCompare:(NSString *)anotherString;
#end
implementation file:
#import "MyString.h"
#implementation NSString (MyString)
- (NSComparisonResult)myCustomCompare:(NSString *)anotherString {
elaborate chopping up of strings into substrings..
For each of the 2 strings I made an NSMutableArray.
Then I determined if these substrings were NSNumbers, which have their own compare:, or NSStrings (caseInsensitiveCompare:)
Then I return an NSComparisonResult (NSOrderedAscending, NSOrderedSame or NSOrderedDescending)
}
#end
Then, in the implementation file of my Thing ManagedObject, I overrid the
- (NSComparisonResult)compare:(Thing *)anotherThing {
return [self.name myCustomCompare:anotherThing.name];
}
One also needs to import MyString.h in the Thing class.
Now, using
[[myArrayController arrangedObjects] sortUsingSelector:#selector(compare:)];
works like a charm.
Just one thing that's been bugging me. If a Thing's name property would contain decimal numbers, like for instance a1.4b and a1.39b, how would I be able to isolate these from the name? (a1.4b would incorrectly be sorted before a1.39b)
To make things even worse, a user could enter a Thing's name to be 1.3.55 ...
I have an NSMutableArray i am trying to convert into a string.
Declaring my NSMutableArray...
NSMutableArray *listData;
And later inside a method...
NSString *foo = [listData componentsJoinedByString:#"|"];
NSLog(#"%#",foo);
It seems no matter what i try i keep getting EXC_BAD_ACCESS.
To make sure each element in my array was an NSString i also tried this...
NSMutableArray *mArray = [[NSMutableArray alloc] init];
for (id ln in listData) {
NSString *boo = [NSString stringWithFormat: #"%#",ln];
[mArray addObject:boo];
}
NSString *foo = [mArray componentsJoinedByString:#"|"];
NSLog(#"%#",foo);
I can manipulate my NSMutableArray by adding/deleting objects in the same method or other methods inside my class. But when i try "componentsJoinedByString" the error pops up. Does anyone have any advice or another way i can combine this array into a single NSString?
In the code you've given, there will never be an NSMutableArray for listData. At some point in your code, you'll need to create one, and presumably populate it.
Edit
Okay, so you may get into memory management problems here, so let's be a bit clearer:
You're synthesizing getters and setters for the instance variable, so it's good practice to use those to access it, they'll take care of retain and releasing appropriately.
To set listData you can simply use
self.listData = [listManage getList:[[NSUserDefaults standardUserDefaults] stringForKey:#"list_name"] list:#"LIST"];
or
[self setListData:[listManage getList:[[NSUserDefaults standardUserDefaults] stringForKey:#"list_name"] list:#"LIST"]];
if you prefer.