If nil is meant to mark the end of parameters, then can I use:
[NSArray arrayWithObjects:obj1, obj2, nil, nil, nil];
as the first nil marks
Why would you intentionally add nil to an array? I think you'd better stop a bit and think twice about why do you have to do this. If you are unsure about the size of the array, you can always go with NSMutableArray.
The addition of nil to the end is not intended to add nils to an array, its simply an artifact of how C processes ... variable argument lists. It has nothing to do with NSArray or NSMutableArray, you cannot store nil in either.
So whether the compiler accepts, nil, nil, nil is actually irrelevant. The compiler will stop reading at the first nil. And writing that code in the first place shows a misunderstanding of obj C collections and var arg methods.
Why not use the new literal syntax and just say
NSArray *myArray = @[@"bla", @"bla", @"bla"];
Either way the extra nils matter not in the syntax you provided.
When you put nil
when creating NSArray
, objects upto that nil
get added. The nil
and objects after that are ignored. Just to complete, you can't add nil
to NSMutableArray
also (say using addObject:
method) and doing that will raise exception.
you can put [NSNull null];
though when creating NSArray.
Yes, exactly, this can be done. The nils after the first one will be ignored.