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  • Using NSNumberFormatter to get a decimal value from an international currency string

    - by Duncan A
    It seems that the NSNumberFormatter can't parse Euro (and probably other) currency strings into a numerical type. Can someone please prove me wrong. I'm attempting to use the following to get a numeric amount from a currency string: NSNumberFormatter *currencyFormatter = [[[NSNumberFormatter alloc] init] autorelease]; [currencyFormatter setNumberStyle:NSNumberFormatterCurrencyStyle]; NSNumber *currencyNumber = [currencyFormatter numberFromString:currencyString]; This works fine for UK and US currency amounts. It even deals with $ and £ and thousands separators with no problems. However, when I use it with euro currency amounts (with the Region Format set to France or Germany in the settings app) it returns an empty string. All of the following strings fail: 12,34 € 12,34 12.345,67 € 12.345,67 It's worth noting that these strings match exactly what comes out of the NSNumberFormatter's stringFromNumber method when using the corresponding locale. Setting the Region Format to France in the settings app, then setting currencyNumber to 12.34 in the following code, results in currencyString being set to '12,34 €' : NSNumberFormatter *currencyFormatter = [[[NSNumberFormatter alloc] init] autorelease]; [currencyFormatter setNumberStyle:NSNumberFormatterCurrencyStyle]; NSString *currencyString = [currencyFormatter stringFromNumber:currencyNumber]; It would obviously be fairly easy to hack around this problem specifically for the Euro but I'm hoping to sell this app in as many countries as possible and I'm thinking that a similar situation is bound to occur with other locales. Does anyone have an answer? TIA, Duncan

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  • More specific NSNumberFormatter failure behaviour

    - by Volte
    I have an NSTextField into which I need the user to enter a number between a max and min, and it would be nice if I could detect when the NSNumberFormatter fails that particular test so I can either display a nicer message ("The number is too large" is not very helpful, it needs to display the valid range) or simply set the field automatically to the nearest valid value. I've looked at the NSTextField delegate's -control:didFailToFormatString:errorDescription: method which doesn't seem to allow you to modify the error, and I've looked at overriding the NSNumberFormatter's -getObjectValue:forString:range:error: method which does give me an NSError that I can modify, but there doesn't seem to be any way to determine which specific error was returned. Since I am just entering a simple integer, I don't need most of the functionality in NSNumberFormatter, would I be better off just writing my own formatter from scratch?

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  • NSNumberFormatter weirdness with NSNumberFormatterPercentStyle

    - by rein
    Hi, I need to parse some text in a UITextField and turn it into a percentage. Ideally, I'd like the user to either type something like 12 or 12% into the text field and have that be parsed into a number as a percentage. Here's what's weird. The number formatter seems to not like 12 and seems to divide 12% by 10000 instead of 100: NSNumberFormatter *formatter = [[[NSNumberFormatter alloc] init] autorelease]; [formatter setNumberStyle:NSNumberFormatterPercentStyle]; NSNumber *n1 = [formatter numberFromString:@"12"]; NSNumber *n2 = [formatter numberFromString:@"12%"]; NSLog(@"n1 = %@", n1); // n1 = (null) NSLog(@"n2 = %@", n2); // n2 = 0.0012 How do I get the formatter to return 0.12 as expected? EDIT: it seems to only happen if the formatter fails first. If the formatter does not fail it returns 0.12 as expected. Strange.

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  • NSNumberFormatter crashing iPhone SDK 4.0b2

    - by Ward
    Hey there, I've got an app that's been in the app store for a while and functions perfectly on OS 3.1 - 3.13. However, when tested on 4.0b2 I noticed that it crashes in the same place every time, but only on the device, never on the simulator. I'm using a 3GS to test. On loadView I initialize an NSNumberFormatter object which is declared and retained in the interface so I have access to it everywhere. In my method I call it several times to convert string values into nsnumbers to be stored in a mutable dictionary. Here's an example: [myDictionary setObject:[myStyleFormatter numberFromString:@"1"] forKey:@"hours"]; [myDictionary setObject:[myStyleFormatter numberFromString:@"30"] forKey:@"minutes"]; [myDictionary setObject:[myStyleFormatter numberFromString:@"10"] forKey:@"seconds"]; For some reason it crashes as soon as it tries to set hours. The error is "attempt to insert nil value (key: hours)" Have I been doing something wrong all along? Has the api changed for 4.0b2? Thanks, Howie

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  • NSNumberFormatter and 'th' 'st' 'nd' 'rd' (ordinal) number endings

    - by jan
    Is there a way to use NSNumberFormatter to get the 'th' 'st' 'nd' 'rd' number endings? EDIT: Looks like it does not exist. Here's what I'm using. +(NSString*)ordinalNumberFormat:(NSInteger)num{ NSString *ending; int ones = num % 10; int tens = floor(num / 10); tens = tens % 10; if(tens == 1){ ending = @"th"; }else { switch (ones) { case 1: ending = @"st"; break; case 2: ending = @"nd"; break; case 3: ending = @"rd"; break; default: ending = @"th"; break; } } return [NSString stringWithFormat:@"%d%@", num, ending]; } Adapted from nickf's answer here http://stackoverflow.com/questions/69262/is-there-an-easy-way-in-net-to-get-st-nd-rd-and-th-endings-for-numbers

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  • NSNumberFormatter customize?

    - by Frederick C. Lee
    I wish to use NSNumberFormatter to merely attached a percent ('%') to the supplied number WITHOUT having it multiplied by 100. The canned kCFNumberFormatterPercentStyle automatically x100 which I don't want. For example, converting 5.0 to 5.0% versus 500%. Using the following: NSNumberFormatter *percentFormatter = [[NSNumberFormatter alloc] init]; [percentFormatter setNumberFormat:@"##0.00%;-##0.00%"]; But 'setNumberFormat' doesn't exist in NSNumberFomatter. I need to use this NSNumberFormatter for my Core-Plot label. How can I customize NSNumberFormat? Ric.

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  • NSNumberFormatter to display custom labels for 10^n (10000 -> 10k)

    - by Michele Colombo
    I need to display numbers on a plot axis. The values could change but I want to avoid too long numbers that will ruin the readability of the graph. My thought was to group every 3 characters and substitute them with K, M and so on (or a custom character). So: 1 - 1, 999 - 999, 1.000 - 1k, 1.200 - 1.2k, 1.280 - 1.2k, 12.800 - 12.8k, 999.999 - 999.9k, 1.000.000 - 1M, ... Note that probably I'll only need to format round numbers (1, 10, 1000, 1500, 2000, 10000, 20000, 30000, 100000, ...). Is that possibile with NSNumberFormatter? I saw that it has a setFormat method but I don't know how much customizable it is. I'm using NSNumberFormatter cause the graph object I use wants it to set label format and I want to avoid changing my data to set the label.

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  • Re-Apply currency formatting to a UITextField on a change event

    - by Jim Aldes
    Howdy all, I'm working with a UITextField that holds a localized currency value. I've seen lots of posts on how to work with this, but my question is: how do I re-apply currency formatting to the UITextField after every key press? I know that I can set up and use a currency formatter with: NSNumberFormatter *currencyFormatter = [[NSNumberFormatter alloc] init]; [currencyFormatter setNumberStyle:NSNumberFormatterCurrencyStyle]; ... [currencyFormatter stringFromNumber:...]; but I don't know how to hook it up. For instance, if the value in the field reads "$12,345" and the user taps the "6" key, then the value should change to "$123,456". Which callback is the "correct" one to do this in (should I use textField:shouldChangeCharactersInRange:replacementString: or a custom target-action) and how do I use the NSNumberFormatter to parse and re-apply formatting to the UITextField's text property? Any help would be much appreciated! Thanks!

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  • Find out number of fraction digits in currency in iOS

    - by thejaz
    I use NSNumberFormatter to format currencies in a localized way, and it works fine. But I want to override this and give the user the option to override the number of digits after the decimal separator. How can I find out the number of digits the NSNumberFormatter will use for a certain currency? I have looked in the NSLocale object, but none of the keys tell me this. NSString * const NSLocaleIdentifier; NSString * const NSLocaleLanguageCode; NSString * const NSLocaleCountryCode; NSString * const NSLocaleScriptCode; NSString * const NSLocaleVariantCode; NSString * const NSLocaleExemplarCharacterSet; NSString * const NSLocaleCalendar; NSString * const NSLocaleCollationIdentifier; NSString * const NSLocaleUsesMetricSystem; NSString * const NSLocaleMeasurementSystem; NSString * const NSLocaleDecimalSeparator; NSString * const NSLocaleGroupingSeparator; NSString * const NSLocaleCurrencySymbol; NSString * const NSLocaleCurrencyCode; NSString * const NSLocaleCollatorIdentifier; NSString * const NSLocaleQuotationBeginDelimiterKey; NSString * const NSLocaleQuotationEndDelimiterKey; NSString * const NSLocaleAlternateQuotationBeginDelimiterKey; NSString * const NSLocaleAlternateQuotationEndDelimiterKey; How can I find out the correct number of decimals for a currency like the NSNumberFormatter seems to know?

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  • Is NSNumberFormatter the only way to format an NSDecimalNumber?

    - by Paul Alexander
    I'm using an NSDecimalNumber to store money in Core Data. I naively used stringWithFormat: at first to format the value, later realizing that it didn't support NSDecimalNumber and was instead formatting the pointer :(. So after some reading through the docs I learned to use the NSNumberFormatter to get the format I wanted. But this just strikes me as the "hard way". Is there any easier way than this:? NSNumberFormatter * formatter = [[NSNumberFormatter alloc] init]; [formatter setNumberStyle: NSNumberFormatterCurrencyStyle]; priceField.text = [formatter stringFromNumber: ent.price]; [formatter release];

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  • How to use mock and verify methods of OCMock in objective-C ? Is there any good tutorial on OCMock i

    - by san
    My problem is I am getting an error: OCMckObject[NSNumberFormatter]: expected method was not invoked:setAllowsFloats:YES I have written following Code: (void) testReturnStringFromNumber { id mockFormatter = [OCMockObject mockForClass:[NSNumberFormatter class]]; StringNumber *testObject = [[StringNumber alloc] init]; [[mockFormatter expect] setAllowsFloats:YES]; [testObject returnStringFromNumber:80.23456]; [mockFormatter verify]; } @implementation StringNumber - (NSString *) returnStringFromNumber:(float)num { NSNumberFormatter *formatter = [[NSNumberFormatter alloc] init]; [formatter setAllowsFloats:YES]; NSString *str= [formatter stringFromNumber:[NSNumber numberWithFloat:num]]; [formatter release]; return str; } @end

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  • Decimal numbers works in iPhone simulator but NOT on iPhone device

    - by matsoftware
    Hi everybody, I noticed a weird behaviour of iPhone OS when using decimal values. The simulator parse them from strings in a correct way but when I test the app on my iPhone it lose the decimal part. In particular, I store values in a dictionary that I retrieve in this way: Code: NSString *thickStr = [dictionary valueForKey:@"thickness"]; NSNumber *thickNum = [[[self class] numberFormatter] numberFromString:thickStr]; [self setSpessore:thickNum]; where the "numberFormatter" class is defined as below: Code: + (NSNumberFormatter *)numberFormatter { static NSNumberFormatter *_formatter; if (_formatter == nil) { _formatter = [[NSNumberFormatter alloc] init]; [_formatter setNumberStyle:NSNumberFormatterDecimalStyle]; [_formatter setFormatterBehavior:NSNumberFormatterBehavior10_4]; [_formatter setGeneratesDecimalNumbers:TRUE]; } return _formatter; } But it doesn't work! The App on iPhone keeps on convert the string to a simple integer, forgetting the decimal part, while the app on iPhone simulator works fine!

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  • Replacing text in NSTextFieldCell inside NSTableView

    - by earl.ct
    Whenever a user would type a number, my app would automatically prepend a currency sign before that number. For example, when the user types "1" in a text field, the text inside it becomes "$1.00". All is good when I use an NSNumberFormatter, an NSTextField, and its delegate method control:didFailToFormatString:errorDescription:. - (BOOL)control:(NSControl *)control didFailToFormatString:(NSString *)string errorDescription:(NSString *)error { if ([[control formatter] isKindOfClass:[NSNumberFormatter class]]) { NSNumberFormatter *formatter = [control formatter]; if ([formatter numberStyle] == NSNumberFormatterCurrencyStyle && ! [string hasPrefix:[formatter currencySymbol]]) { NSDecimalNumber *new = [NSDecimalNumber decimalNumberWithString:string]; if (new == [NSDecimalNumber notANumber]) { new = [NSDecimalNumber zero]; } [control setObjectValue:new]; } } return YES;} Now I would like to have this functionality when a user types a number in a cell inside an NSTableView. I tried using control:didFailToFormatString:errorDescription: but the cell would erase the text instead.

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  • Prevent printing -0

    - by fishinear
    If I do the following in Objective-C: NSString *result = [NSString stringWithFormat:@"%1.1f", -0.01]; It will give result @"-0.0" Does anybody know how I can force a result @"0.0" (without the "-") in this case? EDIT: I tried using NSNumberFormatter, but it has the same issue. The following also produces @"-0.0": double value = -0.01; NSNumberFormatter *numberFormatter = [[NSNumberFormatter alloc] init]; [numberFormatter setNumberStyle:NSNumberFormatterDecimalStyle]; [numberFormatter setMaximumFractionDigits:1]; [numberFormatter setMinimumFractionDigits:1]; NSString *result = [numberFormatter stringFromNumber:[NSNumber numberWithDouble:value]];

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  • Is is possible to derive currency symbol from currency code?

    - by Dave Hunt
    My iPhone app formats an NSDecimalNumber as a currency using setCurrencyCode, however another screen displays just the currency symbol. Rather than storing both the currency code and symbol, is it possible to derive the symbol from the code? I thought the following might work, but it just returns the symbol as $: currencyCode = [dictPrices valueForKey:@"currencyCode"]; NSNumberFormatter *numberFormatter = [[[NSNumberFormatter alloc] init] autorelease]; [numberFormatter setFormatterBehavior:NSNumberFormatterBehavior10_4]; [numberFormatter setCurrencyCode:currencyCode]; [numberFormatter setNumberStyle:NSNumberFormatterCurrencyStyle]; NSString *currencySymbol = [numberFormatter currencySymbol];

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  • iPhone Core Data problem

    - by Junior B.
    This is my first project with Core Data, I followed the Event tutorial provided by Apple that helped me to understand the basic of core data in iPhone. But now, working over my project, I've a problem adding data into my database. When i create an object and set the data, if I try to get it back, the system returns me a strange sequence of characters. This is what i see in log if I try to log it: 2010-05-11 00:16:43.523 FG[2665:207] Package: ‡}00å 2010-05-11 00:16:43.525 FG[2665:207] Package: ‡}00å 2010-05-11 00:16:43.526 FG[2665:207] Package: ‡}00å 2010-05-11 00:16:43.527 FG[2665:207] Package: ‡}00å 2010-05-11 00:16:43.527 FG[2665:207] Package: ‡}00å 2010-05-11 00:16:43.527 FG[2665:207] Items: 5 What kind of problem could be this? Edit: This is the part of the code that generate the error: package = (Package *)[NSEntityDescription insertNewObjectForEntityForName:@"Package" inManagedObjectContext:moc]; theNodes = [doc nodesForXPath:@"//pack" error:&error]; for (CXMLElement *theElement in theNodes) { // Create a counter variable as type "int" int counter; // Loop through the children of the current node for(counter = 0; counter < [theElement childCount]; counter++) { if([[[theElement childAtIndex:counter] name] isEqualToString: @"id"]) [package setIdPackage:[[theElement childAtIndex:counter] stringValue]]; if([[[theElement childAtIndex:counter] name] isEqualToString: @"title"]) [package setPackageTitle:[[theElement childAtIndex:counter] stringValue]]; if([[[theElement childAtIndex:counter] name] isEqualToString: @"category"]) [package setCategory:[[theElement childAtIndex:counter] stringValue]]; if([[[theElement childAtIndex:counter] name] isEqualToString: @"lang"]) [package setLang:[[theElement childAtIndex:counter] stringValue]]; if([[[theElement childAtIndex:counter] name] isEqualToString: @"number"]) { NSNumberFormatter * f = [[NSNumberFormatter alloc] init]; [f setNumberStyle:NSNumberFormatterDecimalStyle]; NSNumber * myNumber = [f numberFromString:[[theElement childAtIndex:counter] stringValue]]; [f release]; [package setNumber:myNumber]; } } } NSLog([NSString stringWithFormat:@"=== %s ===\nID: %s\nCategory: %s\nLanguage: %s",[package packageTitle], [package idPackage] ,[package category],[package lang]]);

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  • UILabel + IRR, KRW and KHR currencies with wrong symbol

    - by serb
    Hi, I'm experiencing issues when converting decimal to currency for Korean Won, Cambodian Riel and Iranian Rial and showing the result to the UILabel text. Conversion itself passes just fine and I can see correct currency symbol at the debugger, even the NSLog prints the symbol well. If I assign this NSString instance to the UILabel text, the currency symbol is shown as a crossed box instead of the correct symbol. There is no other code between, does not matter what font I use. I tried to print ? (Korean Won) using the unicode value (0x20A9) or even using UTF8 representation (\xe2\x82\xa9), but all I get is the crossed box on the label. Any other supported currency in iPhone SDK and NSLocale (nearly 170 currencies) works perfectly fine no matter how exotic the currency is. Anyone else experiencing the same problem? Is there a "cure" for this? Thanks EDIT: -(NSString *)decimalToCurrency:(NSDecimalNumber *)value byLocale:(NSLocale *)locale { NSNumberFormatter *fmt = [[NSNumberFormatter alloc] init]; [fmt setLocale: locale]; [fmt setNumberStyle: NSNumberFormatterCurrencyStyle]; NSString *res = [fmt stringFromNumber: value]; [fmt release]; return res; } lbValue.text = [self decimalToCurrency: price byLocale: koreanLocale];

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  • Problem in In-App purchase-consumable model

    - by kunal-dutta
    I have created a nonconsumable in app purchase item and now I want to create a consumable in-app purchase by which a user to buy it every time he uses it,and also I want to create a subscription model In-App purchase. Everything works as expected except when I buy the item more than one time, iPhone pop ups a message saying "You've already purchased the item. Do You want to buy it again?". Is It possible to disable this dialog and proceed to the actual purchase?And what will have to change in following code with different model:- in InApp purchase manager.m: @implementation InAppPurchaseManager //@synthesize purchasableObjects; //@synthesize storeObserver; @synthesize proUpgradeProduct; @synthesize productsRequest; //BOOL featureAPurchased; //BOOL featureBPurchased; //static InAppPurchaseManager* _sharedStoreManager; // self (void)dealloc { //[_sharedStoreManager release]; //[storeObserver release]; [super dealloc]; } (void)requestProUpgradeProductData { NSSet *productIdentifiers = [NSSet setWithObject:@"com.vigyaapan.iWorkOut1" ]; productsRequest = [[SKProductsRequest alloc] initWithProductIdentifiers:productIdentifiers]; productsRequest.delegate = self; [productsRequest start]; // we will release the request object in the delegate callback } pragma mark - pragma mark SKProductsRequestDelegate methods (void)productsRequest:(SKProductsRequest *)request didReceiveResponse:(SKProductsResponse *)response { //NSArray *products = response.products; //proUpgradeProduct = [products count] == 1 ? [[products firstObject] retain]: nil; if (proUpgradeProduct) { NSLog(@"Product title: %@", proUpgradeProduct.localizedTitle); NSLog(@"Product description: %@", proUpgradeProduct.localizedDescription); NSLog(@"Product price: %@", proUpgradeProduct.price); NSLog(@"Product id:%@", proUpgradeProduct.productIdentifier); } /*for (NSString invalidProductId in response.invalidProductIdentifiers) { NSLog(@"Invalid product id: %@" , invalidProductId); }/ //finally release the reqest we alloc/init’ed in requestProUpgradeProductData [productsRequest release]; [[NSNotificationCenter defaultCenter] postNotificationName:kInAppPurchaseManagerProductsFetchedNotification object:self userInfo:nil]; } pragma - pragma Public methods /* call this method once on startup*/ (void)loadStore { /* restarts any purchases if they were interrupted last time the app was open*/ [[SKPaymentQueue defaultQueue] addTransactionObserver:self]; /* get the product description (defined in early sections)*/ [self requestProUpgradeProductData]; } /* call this before making a purchase*/ (BOOL)canMakePurchases { return [SKPaymentQueue canMakePayments]; } /* kick off the upgrade transaction*/ (void)purchaseProUpgrade { SKPayment *payment = [SKPayment paymentWithProductIdentifier:@"9820091347"]; [[SKPaymentQueue defaultQueue] addPayment:payment]; } pragma - pragma Purchase helpers /* saves a record of the transaction by storing the receipt to disk*/ (void)recordTransaction:(SKPaymentTransaction )transaction { if ([transaction.payment.productIdentifier isEqualToString:kInAppPurchaseProUpgradeProductId]) { / save the transaction receipt to disk*/ [[NSUserDefaults standardUserDefaults] setValue:transaction.transactionReceipt forKey:@"proUpgradeTransactionReceipt" ]; [[NSUserDefaults standardUserDefaults] synchronize]; } } /* enable pro features*/ (void)provideContent:(NSString )productId { if ([productId isEqualToString:kInAppPurchaseProUpgradeProductId]) { / enable the pro features*/ [[NSUserDefaults standardUserDefaults] setBool:YES forKey:@"isProUpgradePurchased" ]; [[NSUserDefaults standardUserDefaults] synchronize]; } } (void)finishTransaction:(SKPaymentTransaction )transaction wasSuccessful:(BOOL)wasSuccessful { // / remove the transaction from the payment queue.*/ [[SKPaymentQueue defaultQueue] finishTransaction:transaction]; NSDictionary *userInfo = [NSDictionary dictionaryWithObjectsAndKeys:transaction, @"transaction" , nil]; if (wasSuccessful) { /* send out a notification that we’ve finished the transaction*/ [[NSNotificationCenter defaultCenter]postNotificationName:kInAppPurchaseManagerTransactionSucceededNotification object:self userInfo:userInfo]; } else { /* send out a notification for the failed transaction*/ [[NSNotificationCenter defaultCenter] postNotificationName:kInAppPurchaseManagerTransactionFailedNotification object:self userInfo:userInfo]; } } (void)completeTransaction:(SKPaymentTransaction *)transaction { [self recordTransaction:transaction]; [self provideContent:transaction.payment.productIdentifier]; [self finishTransaction:transaction wasSuccessful:YES]; } (void)restoreTransaction:(SKPaymentTransaction *)transaction { [self recordTransaction:transaction.originalTransaction]; [self provideContent:transaction.originalTransaction.payment.productIdentifier]; [self finishTransaction:transaction wasSuccessful:YES]; } (void)failedTransaction:(SKPaymentTransaction )transaction { if (transaction.error.code != SKErrorPaymentCancelled) { / error!/ [self finishTransaction:transaction wasSuccessful:NO]; } else { / this is fine, the user just cancelled, so don’t notify*/ [[SKPaymentQueue defaultQueue] finishTransaction:transaction]; } } (void)paymentQueue:(SKPaymentQueue *)queue updatedTransactions:(NSArray *)transactions { for (SKPaymentTransaction *transaction in transactions) { switch (transaction.transactionState) { case SKPaymentTransactionStatePurchased: [self completeTransaction:transaction]; break; case SKPaymentTransactionStateFailed: [self failedTransaction:transaction]; break; case SKPaymentTransactionStateRestored: [self restoreTransaction:transaction]; break; default: break; } } } @end in SKProduct.m:- @implementation SKProduct (LocalizedPrice) - (NSString *)localizedPrice { NSNumberFormatter *numberFormatter = [[NSNumberFormatter alloc] init]; [numberFormatter setFormatterBehavior:NSNumberFormatterBehavior10_4]; [numberFormatter setNumberStyle:NSNumberFormatterCurrencyStyle]; [numberFormatter setLocale:self.priceLocale]; NSString *formattedString = [numberFormatter stringFromNumber:self.price]; [numberFormatter release]; return formattedString; }

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  • Localize Currency for iPhone

    - by Meltemi
    I would like my iPhone app to allow the input, display and storage of currency amounts using the appropriate symbol ($, €, £, ¥, etc) for the user. Would NSNumberFormatter do everything I need? What happens when a user switches their locale and these amounts (dollars, yen, etc.) are stored as NSDecimalNumbers. I assume, to be safe, it's necessary to somehow capture the locale at the time of entry and then the currency symbol and store them in my instance along with the NSDecimalNumber ivar so they can be unwrapped and displayed appropriately down the road should the user changed their locale since the time when the item was created? Sorry, I have little localization experience so hoping for a couple quick pointers before diving in. Lastly, any insight on how to you handle this kind of input given the limitations of the iPhone's keyboards?

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  • Binding to NSTextField Cell not working, edited value resets to default

    - by cygnus6320
    I'm working on a Core Data document application that dynamically creates NSTableColumns. The data cell type may be a checkbox, slider, etc. Programmatically binding to all cell types works, except for NSTextFieldCell. All NSTextFieldCells fail to bind, and after editing they return to their default value. This happens no matter if they're binding to a string, a number (with an NSNumberFormatter applied), or a date (NSDateFormatter applied). I'm using the following format to do all bindings: NSDictionary *textFieldOpts = [NSDictionary dictionaryWithObjectsAndKeys:@"YES", NSContinuouslyUpdatesValueBindingOption, @"YES", NSValidatesImmediatelyBindingOption, nil]; [aCell bind:@"value" toObject:[[entryAC arrangedObjects] objectAtIndex:0] withKeyPath:@"numberData" options:textFieldOpts]; Again, these statements work if the cell type is anything but an NSTextFieldCell. I threw in an observeValueForKeyPath method to log when the value changes... and for other cell types (NSSliderCell for instance) I can see the value changing, but with the NSTextFieldCell, it never, ever updates. Help!

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  • plot negative and positive values in same Y-axis in coreplot ios

    - by user3774439
    I have an issue in converting axis labels to int or float values. This is my Y-Axis. It contains temperature values contains -50, 33, 117, 200. CPTXYAxis *y = axisSet.yAxis; y.labelingPolicy = CPTAxisLabelingPolicyNone; y.orthogonalCoordinateDecimal = CPTDecimalFromUnsignedInteger(1); y.majorGridLineStyle = majorGridLineStyle; y.minorGridLineStyle = minorGridLineStyle; y.minorTicksPerInterval = 0.0; y.labelOffset = 0.0; y.title = @""; y.titleOffset = 0.0; NSMutableSet *yLabels = [NSMutableSet setWithCapacity:4]; NSMutableSet *yLocations = [NSMutableSet setWithCapacity:4]; NSArray *yAxisLabels = [NSArray arrayWithObjects:@"-50", @"33", @"117", @"200", nil]; NSNumberFormatter * nFormatter = [[NSNumberFormatter alloc] init]; [nFormatter setNumberStyle:NSNumberFormatterDecimalStyle]; for ( NSUInteger i = 0; i < [yAxisLabels count]; i++ ) { NSLog(@"%@",[yAxisLabels objectAtIndex:i]); CPTAxisLabel *label = [[CPTAxisLabel alloc] initWithText:[NSString stringWithFormat:@"%@",[yAxisLabels objectAtIndex:i]] textStyle:axisTextStyle]; label.tickLocation = CPTDecimalFromUnsignedInteger(i); label.offset = y.majorTickLength; if (label) { [yLabels addObject:label]; [yLocations addObject:[NSDecimalNumber numberWithUnsignedInteger:i]]; } label = nil; } y.axisLabels = yLabels; y.majorTickLocations = yLocations; y.labelFormatter = nFormatter; Now, my issue is.. I am getting data from the BLE device as temperature values as strings like 50, 60.3, etc... Now I want plot these values from BLE device with the Y-axis values. i am unable convert these Y-axis labels to temperature values. Could you please help me guys...I have tried many time still no luck. Please help me UPDATE:: This is the way I am creating scatterplot: -(void)createScatterPlotsWithIdentifier:(NSString *)identifier color:(CPTColor *)color forGraph:(CPTGraph *)graph forXYPlotSpace:(CPTXYPlotSpace *)plotSpace{ CPTScatterPlot *scatterPlot = [[CPTScatterPlot alloc] init]; scatterPlot.dataSource = self; scatterPlot.identifier = identifier; //Plot a graph with in the plotspace [plotSpace scaleToFitPlots:[NSArray arrayWithObjects:scatterPlot, nil]]; plotSpace.xRange = [CPTPlotRange plotRangeWithLocation:CPTDecimalFromUnsignedInteger(0) length:CPTDecimalFromUnsignedInteger(30)]; plotSpace.yRange = [CPTPlotRange plotRangeWithLocation:CPTDecimalFromUnsignedInteger(-50) length:CPTDecimalFromUnsignedInteger(250)]; CPTMutablePlotRange *xRange = [[self getCoreplotSpace].xRange mutableCopy]; [xRange expandRangeByFactor:CPTDecimalFromCGFloat(-1)]; [self getCoreplotSpace].xRange = xRange; CPTMutableLineStyle *scatterLineStyle = [scatterPlot.dataLineStyle mutableCopy]; scatterLineStyle.lineWidth = 1; scatterLineStyle.lineColor = color; scatterPlot.dataLineStyle = scatterLineStyle; CPTMutableLineStyle *scatterSymbolLineStyle = [CPTMutableLineStyle lineStyle]; scatterSymbolLineStyle.lineColor = color; CPTPlotSymbol *scatterSymbol = [CPTPlotSymbol ellipsePlotSymbol]; scatterSymbol.fill = [CPTFill fillWithColor:color]; scatterSymbol.lineStyle = scatterSymbolLineStyle; scatterSymbol.size = CGSizeMake(2.0f, 2.0f); scatterPlot.plotSymbol = scatterSymbol; [graph addPlot:scatterPlot toPlotSpace:plotSpace]; } Configuring the Y-axis like this: NSMutableSet *yLabels = [NSMutableSet setWithCapacity:4]; NSMutableSet *yLocations = [NSMutableSet setWithCapacity:4]; NSArray *yAxisLabels = [NSArray arrayWithObjects:@"-50", @"33", @"117", @"200", nil]; NSArray *customTickLocations = [NSArray arrayWithObjects:[NSDecimalNumber numberWithUnsignedInt:-50], [NSDecimalNumber numberWithInt:33], [NSDecimalNumber numberWithInt:117], [NSDecimalNumber numberWithInt:200],nil]; for ( NSUInteger i = 0; i < [yAxisLabels count]; i++ ) { NSLog(@"%@",[yAxisLabels objectAtIndex:i]); CPTAxisLabel *label = [[CPTAxisLabel alloc] initWithText:[NSString stringWithFormat:@"%@",[yAxisLabels objectAtIndex:i]] textStyle:axisTextStyle]; label.tickLocation = CPTDecimalFromInteger([[customTickLocations objectAtIndex:i] integerValue]); label.offset = y.majorTickLength; if (label) { [yLabels addObject:label]; [yLocations addObject:[NSString stringWithFormat:@"%d",[[customTickLocations objectAtIndex:i] integerValue]]]; } label = nil; } y.axisLabels = yLabels; y.majorTickLocations = [NSSet setWithArray:customTickLocations]; Eric, I set the range as you said in CreateSctterPlot method. But In horizontal line on graph are not coming. Could you please help me what I am wrong. Thanks

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  • How to get NSFormatter subclass to work with NSTableColumn sort key and selector?

    - by Andrew
    My setup: I have a sqlite database from which I populate a NSMutableArray of NSDictionary objects this is the DataSource for my NSTableView. One of the columns holds "time", the time is a float that holds seconds. I would like to display the values in this column as minutes:seconds. For instance my data would be 123.4329387 I want to display 2:03 which I have no problem doing with a subclass of NSFormatter (or NSNumberFormatter) applied to my NSTextField in the column. I have sorting set up by using the Table Column Attributes in IB, I just have the sort key set to "time" and the selector set to "compare:" which works fine without the formatter. Currently this gives me something like this when I sort (descending) 1:37, 1:31, 0:10, 0:10, 0:09, 1:30, 1:30, 1:26, 0:09 and similar nonsense, it looks like something is going on but it's definitely not sorted. How do I get the sort to look at the underlying data instead of the formatted value? Alternately, how do I specify a custom sort method and where do I put the code for said method? I have searched around quite a bit and have not found anything to help me out with this problem, any help with this is most appreciated.

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  • Integer Extensions - 1st, 2nd, 3rd etc [closed]

    - by David Schiefer
    Possible Duplicate: NSNumberFormatter and ‘th’ ‘st’ ‘nd’ ‘rd’ (ordinal) number endings Hello, I'm building an application that downloads player ranks and displays them. So say for example, you're 3rd out of all the players, I inserted a condition that will display it as 3rd, not 3th and i did the same for 2nd and 1st. When getting to higher ranks though, such as 2883rd, it'll display 2883th (for obvious reasons) My question is, how can I get it to reformat the number to XXX1st, XXX2nd, XXX3rd etc? To show what I mean, here's how I format my number to add a "rd" if it's 3 if ([[container stringByTrimmingCharactersInSet:[NSCharacterSet whitespaceAndNewlineCharacterSet]] isEqualToString:@"3"]) { NSString*badge = [NSString stringWithFormat:@"%@rd",[container stringByTrimmingCharactersInSet:[NSCharacterSet whitespaceAndNewlineCharacterSet]]]; NSString*scoreText = [NSString stringWithFormat:@"ROC Server Rank: %@rd",[container stringByTrimmingCharactersInSet:[NSCharacterSet whitespaceAndNewlineCharacterSet]]]; profile.badgeValue = badge; rank.text = scoreText; } I can't do this for every number up to 2000 (there are 2000 ranks in total) - what can I do to solve this problem?

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