I have Constants NSString, that I want to call like:
[newString isEqualToString:CONSTANT_STRING]; Any wrong code here?
I got this warning:
sending 'const NSString *' to parameter of type 'NSString *' discards qualifiers
How should these be declared?
You should declare your constant string as follows:
NSString * const kSomeConstantString = @""; // constant pointer instead of:
const NSString * kSomeConstantString = @""; // pointer to constant // equivalent to NSString const * kSomeConstantString = @""; The former is a constant pointer to an NSString object, while the latter is a pointer to a constant NSString object.
Using a NSString * const prevents you from reassigning kSomeConstantString to point to a different NSString object.
The method isEqualToString: expects an argument of type NSString *. If you pass a pointer to a constant string (const NSString *), you are passing something different than it expects.
Besides, NSString objects are already immutable, so making them const NSString is meaningless.
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