views:

182

answers:

2

I have a NSArray of CalEvents returned with the [CalCalendarStore eventPredicateWithStartDate] method. From the events returned, I am trying to keep only those in which the title of the event == @"on call" (case-insensitive).

I am able to keep in the array those events whose title includes @"on call" with the following code (where events is a NSArray populated with CalEvents):

NSPredicate *onCallPredicate = [NSPredicate predicateWithFormat:@"(SELF.title CONTAINS[c] 'on call')"]; [events filteredArrayUsingPredicate:onCallPredicate];

I've tried using a predicate format string like:

@"SELF.title == 'on call'" but this doesn't seem to work.

Is there an easier way to do this?

Thanks,

+1  A: 

Try [NSPredicate predicateWithFormat:@"title ==[c] %@", @"on call"];

Cory Kilger
+1, although you could throw the `[c]` modifier after the `==` to make it case-insensitive.
Dave DeLong
Edited it to be case-insensitive.
Cory Kilger
+1  A: 

Try predicate with format @"self.title like[c] 'on call'". The following sample code outputs 2 strings:

NSArray* ar = [NSArray arrayWithObjects:@"on call", @"I'm on call", @"lala", @"On call", nil];
NSArray* filt = [ar filteredArrayUsingPredicate:[NSPredicate predicateWithFormat:@"self like[c] 'on call'"]];
NSLog([filt description]);

//Output
"on call",
"On call"
Vladimir
Is there a difference between using `==` and `like` for string comparisons?
Garry
Looks like in your case the work they same. But if you want to use wildcards in string comparison then '==' won't work and you'll need to use LIKE instead.
Vladimir