I want to get the double value from "1.04E-4" NSString, but I didn't manage yet how to do it.
I tried the following:
1.
NSString* str = #"1.0E-4";
double value = [str doubleValue]; //returns 0.0001
2.
NSString* str = #"1.0E-4";
double value;
NSScanner* scanner = [NSScanner scannerWithString:str];
[scanner scanDouble:&value];
//0.0001 again
Instead of value = 1.0E-4, I get 0.0001
Could someone help me with this?
Appreciate,
Alex.
For the record, 1.0E-4 = 0.0001.
In Java, if I use Double.parseDouble("1.0E-4") I get 1.0E-4, but in objc I don't know how to do this.I encounter some problems translating some Java code into objc, and this is one of the differences that I've spot since now.
Related
I've been working on a calculator and I wanted to implement conversions from decimal to octal and from decimal to hexadecimal. I'm new to Xcode and Objective C, but I've managed to get a conversion from decimal to octal, it just doesn't seem to work with hexadecimal.
Here's the code I've written to convert a double to octal:
double result = 0;
...
double decToOct = [self popOperand];
NSString *oct = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%llo", (long long)decToOct];
result = [oct doubleValue];
Using the same scheme (obviously that includes changing #"%llo" with #"%llx") the conversion to hexadecimal works up to a certain point. It does numbers 0 through 9 just fine, but once it hits 10, it comes up as 0. To test, I also input 5395 and it displayed 1513, the desired result.
Because of this, I can only assume that for some reason my code does not want to input the actual letters of the hexadecimal values (e.g. 11 would convert to B but it shows up as 0) .
Any suggestions? Thanks in advance.
UPDATE:
In addition, I have also been using this to display the result:
double result = [self.brain performOperation:operation];
self.display.text = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%g", result];
result, as listed from the top, is an argument which is eventually returned here, to self.brain performOperation:operation. This is supposed to handle the display of all operations, including: addition, multiplication, etc. but also octal and hexadecimal. Again, it works fine with octal, but not with hexadecimal.
Try this, May be it will help you. Please do let me know if i am wrong here:--->
NSString *decStr = #"11";
NSString *hexStr = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%lX",
(unsigned long)[dec integerValue]];
NSLog(#"%#", hexStr);
If you know your string only contains a valid decimal number then the simplest way would be:
NSString *dec = #"254";
NSString *hex = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"0x%lX",
(unsigned long)[dec integerValue]];
NSLog(#"%#", hex);
so I want to convert NSString to double. I found the following example:
NSString * s = #"1.5e5";
NSLog(#"%lf", [s doubleValue]);
It works but if doubleValue cannot convert the string to double it simply returns 0.0 which is not what I need. I need some method that tries to convert a string representation of double to double and if indicate somehow if it can't be converted.
c# has an excellent method
double d;
boolean Double.TryParse(str, out d)
Is there any method similar to the above one in Objective C? or maybe it's better to use regex? however, i don't really know how to do that.
You can use the NSScanner class:
NSString *s = #"1.5e5";
NSScanner *scanner = [NSScanner scannerWithString:s];
double d;
BOOL success = [scanner scanDouble:&d];
If you want to ensure that the entire string has been scanned (no extra characters after the number), use
BOOL isAtEnd = [scanner isAtEnd];
In array I do have two values value1="234.3423" value2="12.60348" i need to pass this value to varable double x, double y;
How to do this
Thanks in advance.
First, you need to turn them into the number (which you're giving in C string syntax here) into an NSString:
char *value1 = "234.3423";
NSString *string1 = [NSString stringWithUTF8String:value1];
Then, simply do this:
double x = [string1 doubleValue];
That's it. If the simple number parsing of NSString is not enough for you, you will need to look into NSNumberFormatter.
double x=[[myArrayList objectAtIndext:1] doubleValue];
double y=[[myArrayList objectAtIndext:2] doubleValue];
Hope its works for me :D
If not help me any another easy way.
I've got a number in a NSString #"15". I want to convert this to NSUInteger, but I don't know how to do that...
NSString *str = #"15";
// Extract an integer number, returns 0 if there's no valid number at the start of the string.
NSInteger i = [str integerValue];
If you really want an NSUInteger, just cast it, but you may want to test the value beforehand.
The currently chosen answer is incorrect for NSUInteger. As Corey Floyd points out a comment on the selected answer this won't work if the value is larger than INT_MAX. A better way of doing this is to use NSNumber and then using one of the methods on NSNumber to retrieve the type you're interested in, e.g.:
NSString *str = #"15"; // Or whatever value you want
NSNumber *number = [NSNumber numberWithLongLong: str.longLongValue];
NSUInteger value = number.unsignedIntegerValue;
All these answers are wrong on a 64-bit system.
NSScanner *scanner = [NSScanner scannerWithString:#"15"];
unsigned long long ull;
if (![scanner scanUnsignedLongLong:&ull]) {
ull = 0; // Or handle failure some other way
}
return (NSUInteger)ull; // This happens to work because NSUInteger is the same as unsigned long long at the moment.
Test with 9223372036854775808, which won't fit in a signed long long.
you can try with [string longLongValue] or [string intValue]..
I want to convert a string into a double and after doing some math on it, convert it back to a string.
How do I do this in Objective-C?
Is there a way to round a double to the nearest integer too?
You can convert an NSString into a double with
double myDouble = [myString doubleValue];
Rounding to the nearest int can then be done as
int myInt = (int)(myDouble + (myDouble>0 ? 0.5 : -0.5))
I'm honestly not sure if there's a more streamlined way to convert back into a string than
NSString* myNewString = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%d", myInt];
To really convert from a string to a number properly, you need to use an instance of NSNumberFormatter configured for the locale from which you're reading the string.
Different locales will format numbers differently. For example, in some parts of the world, COMMA is used as a decimal separator while in others it is PERIOD — and the thousands separator (when used) is reversed. Except when it's a space. Or not present at all.
It really depends on the provenance of the input. The safest thing to do is configure an NSNumberFormatter for the way your input is formatted and use -[NSFormatter numberFromString:] to get an NSNumber from it. If you want to handle conversion errors, you can use -[NSFormatter getObjectValue:forString:range:error:] instead.
Adding to olliej's answer, you can convert from an int back to a string with NSNumber's stringValue:
[[NSNumber numberWithInt:myInt] stringValue]
stringValue on an NSNumber invokes descriptionWithLocale:nil, giving you a localized string representation of value. I'm not sure if [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%d",myInt] will give you a properly localized reprsentation of myInt.
Here's a working sample of NSNumberFormatter reading localized number String (xCode 3.2.4, osX 10.6), to save others the hours I've just spent messing around. Beware: while it can handle trailing blanks such as "8,765.4 ", this cannot handle leading white space and this cannot handle stray text characters. (Bad input strings: " 8" and "8q" and "8 q".)
NSString *tempStr = #"8,765.4";
// localization allows other thousands separators, also.
NSNumberFormatter * myNumFormatter = [[NSNumberFormatter alloc] init];
[myNumFormatter setLocale:[NSLocale currentLocale]]; // happen by default?
[myNumFormatter setFormatterBehavior:NSNumberFormatterBehavior10_4];
// next line is very important!
[myNumFormatter setNumberStyle:NSNumberFormatterDecimalStyle]; // crucial
NSNumber *tempNum = [myNumFormatter numberFromString:tempStr];
NSLog(#"string '%#' gives NSNumber '%#' with intValue '%i'",
tempStr, tempNum, [tempNum intValue]);
[myNumFormatter release]; // good citizen
olliej's rounding method is wrong for negative numbers
2.4 rounded is 2 (olliej's method gets this right)
−2.4 rounded is −2 (olliej's method returns -1)
Here's an alternative
int myInt = (int)(myDouble + (myDouble>0 ? 0.5 : -0.5))
You could of course use a rounding function from math.h
// Converting String in to Double
double doubleValue = [yourString doubleValue];
// Converting Double in to String
NSString *yourString = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%.20f", doubleValue];
// .20f takes the value up to 20 position after decimal
// Converting double to int
int intValue = (int) doubleValue;
or
int intValue = [yourString intValue];
For conversion from a number to a string, how about using the new literals syntax (XCode >= 4.4), its a little more compact.
int myInt = (int)round( [#"1.6" floatValue] );
NSString* myString = [#(myInt) description];
(Boxes it up as a NSNumber and converts to a string using the NSObjects' description method)
For rounding, you should probably use the C functions defined in math.h.
int roundedX = round(x);
Hold down Option and double click on round in Xcode and it will show you the man page with various functions for rounding different types.
This is the easiest way I know of:
float myFloat = 5.3;
NSInteger myInt = (NSInteger)myFloat;
from this example here, you can see the the conversions both ways:
NSString *str=#"5678901234567890";
long long verylong;
NSRange range;
range.length = 15;
range.location = 0;
[[NSScanner scannerWithString:[str substringWithRange:range]] scanLongLong:&verylong];
NSLog(#"long long value %lld",verylong);
convert text entered in textfield to integer
double mydouble=[_myTextfield.text doubleValue];
rounding to the nearest double
mydouble=(round(mydouble));
rounding to the nearest int(considering only positive values)
int myint=(int)(mydouble);
converting from double to string
myLabel.text=[NSString stringWithFormat:#"%f",mydouble];
or
NSString *mystring=[NSString stringWithFormat:#"%f",mydouble];
converting from int to string
myLabel.text=[NSString stringWithFormat:#"%d",myint];
or
NSString *mystring=[NSString stringWithFormat:#"%f",mydouble];
I ended up using this handy macro:
#define STRING(value) [#(value) stringValue]