This feels like a dumb question because it seems to me like my use case must be quite common.
Say I want to represent a sparse set of indexes with an NSIndexSet (which is of course what it's for). I can use -firstIndex
to get the lowest one and -lastIndex
for the highest, but what's the canonical way to get a single, arbitrary index in the middle, given its "index"? The docs have left me unclear.
E.g. if I have an index set with the indexes { 0, 5, 8, 10, 12, 28 }, and I want to say "give me the fourth index" and I'd expect to get back 10 (or 12 I suppose depending on whether I count the zeroth, but let's not get into that, you know what I mean).
Note that I'm not doing "enumeration" across the whole index set. At a given point in time I just want to know what the nth index in the set is by numerical order.
Maybe my data structure is wrong ("set"s aren't usually designed for such ordered access), but there seems to be no NSIndexArray to speak of.
Am I missing something obvious?
Thanks!
NSIndexSet
isn't designed for that sort of access. Usually, you enumerate through the indexes in a set like so:
NSUInteger idx = [theSet indexGreaterThanOrEqualToIndex: 0];
while (idx != NSNotFound) {
// idx equals the next index in the set.
idx = [theSet indexGreaterThanIndex: idx];
}
@Richard points out this for
loop is simpler:
for (NSUInteger i = [indexSet firstIndex]; i != NSNotFound; i = [indexSet indexGreaterThanIndex:i]) {
// i equals the next index in the set.
}
There's some block-based methods that are new to NSIndexSet
as of Mac OS X 10.6/iOS 4.0, but I haven't reviewed them as of yet.
It should be trivial to modify the above example to keep a running count of indexes and stop when it reaches the fourth index in the set. ;)