Re: doubleValue (for an NSString)
Re: doubleValue (for an NSString)
- Subject: Re: doubleValue (for an NSString)
- From: Quincey Morris <email@hidden>
- Date: Thu, 20 Mar 2008 16:26:31 -0700
On Mar 20, 2008, at 16:13, Boyd Collier wrote:
According to Apple's documents, the selector doubleValue returns 0.0
if the instance of an NSString that is the receiver "doesn’t begin
with a valid text representation of a floating-point number." Is
there a simple way to distinguish between the string 0.0, which
shouldn't be considered illegitimate for my purposes, and the string
(for example) X0.0 other than writing extra lines of code to
distinguish one case from the other? I know I could use a scanner,
but perhaps there's something simple that I'm overlooking.
As it happens, I ran into the integer version of this question
yesterday. My pragmatic solution was to trim the string of whitespace,
then test whether the first character was a digit (or a period, or a
minus sign in your case, perhaps, but they may introduce localization
concerns), and go ahead with the string conversion if it is. A bit
hackish, but easier than setting up a NSScanner.
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