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Using valueForKeyPath on NSDictionary if a key starts the @ symbol?

I want to use valueForKeyPath on my NSDictionary, but the problem is that one of the keys is a string that starts with the @ symbol. I have no control over the naming of the key.

I'm having problems trying to create the key path as I'm getting a format exception, even when trying to escape the @ symbol:

This works fine:

[[[dict objectForKey:@"key1"] objectForKey:@"@specialKey"] objectForKey:@"key3"]

However none of these work:

[dict valueForKeyPath:@"[email protected]"]
[dict valueForKeyPath:@"key1.@@specialKey.key3"]

Any ideas?

Thanks,

Mike

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Michael Waterfall Avatar asked Oct 14 '09 17:10

Michael Waterfall


2 Answers

you shouldn't be using @ signs with your key names if you want to use key value coding.

apple's guidelines for key names are as follows:

Keys must use ASCII encoding, begin with a lowercase letter, and may not contain whitespace.

You'll have to find a workaround to reformat the key string whereever you're getting your keys from to be KVC compliant.

like image 167
pxl Avatar answered Sep 30 '22 20:09

pxl


Just to update this old question a little...

The reason that these:

[dict valueForKeyPath:@"[email protected]"]
[dict valueForKeyPath:@"key1.@@specialKey.key3"]

...fail is that any "@" symbols in a key path are interpreted as being collection's operators as with:

[dict valueForKeyPath:@"[email protected]"] // returns the sum of all 'key3' values
[dict valueForKeyPath:@"[email protected]"] // returns the average of all 'key3' values

The nested key calls:

[[[dict objectForKey:@"key1"] objectForKey:@"@specialKey"] objectForKey:@"key3"]

... work because a single key is not processed as a key path.

like image 21
TechZen Avatar answered Sep 30 '22 18:09

TechZen