I have an array ["abc", "94761178","790"]
I want to iterate each and check is a String or an Int?
How to check it?
How to convert "123" to integer 123?
I have an array ["abc", "94761178","790"]
I want to iterate each and check is a String or an Int?
How to check it?
How to convert "123" to integer 123?
Here is a small Swift version using String extension :
Swift 3/Swift 4 :
extension String {
var isNumber: Bool {
return !isEmpty && rangeOfCharacter(from: CharacterSet.decimalDigits.inverted) == nil
}
}
Swift 2 :
extension String {
var isNumber : Bool {
get{
return !self.isEmpty && self.rangeOfCharacterFromSet(NSCharacterSet.decimalDigitCharacterSet().invertedSet) == nil
}
}
}
Edit Swift 2.2:
In swift 2.2 use Int(yourArray[1])
var yourArray = ["abc", "94761178","790"]
var num = Int(yourArray[1])
if num != nil {
println("Valid Integer")
}
else {
println("Not Valid Integer")
}
It will show you that string is valid integer and num contains valid Int.You can do your calculation with num.
From docs:
If the string represents an integer that fits into an Int, returns the corresponding integer.This accepts strings that match the regular expression "[-+]?[0-9]+" only.
Be aware that checking a string/number using the Int initializer has limits. Specifically, a max value of 2^32-1 or 4294967295. This can lead to problems, as a phone number of 8005551234 will fail the Int(8005551234) check despite being a valid number.
A much safer approach is to use NSCharacterSet to check for any characters matching the decimal set in the range of the string.
let number = "8005551234"
let numberCharacters = NSCharacterSet.decimalDigitCharacterSet().invertedSet
if !number.isEmpty && number.rangeOfCharacterFromSet(numberCharacters) == nil {
// string is a valid number
} else {
// string contained non-digit characters
}
Additionally, it could be useful to add this to a String extension.
public extension String {
func isNumber() -> Bool {
let numberCharacters = NSCharacterSet.decimalDigitCharacterSet().invertedSet
return !self.isEmpty && self.rangeOfCharacterFromSet(numberCharacters) == nil
}
}
I think the nicest solution is:
extension String {
var isNumeric : Bool {
return Double(self) != nil
}
}
Starting from Swift 2, String.toInt() was removed. A new Int Initializer was being introduced: Int(str: String)
for target in ["abc", "94761178","790"]
{
if let number = Int(target)
{
print("value: \(target) is a valid number. add one to get :\(number+1)!")
}
else
{
print("value: \(target) is not a valid number.")
}
}
Swift 3, 4
extension String {
var isNumber: Bool {
let characters = CharacterSet.decimalDigits.inverted
return !self.isEmpty && rangeOfCharacter(from: characters) == nil
}
}
Simple solution like this:
extension String {
public var isNumber: Bool {
return !isEmpty && rangeOfCharacter(from: CharacterSet.decimalDigits.inverted) == nil
}
}
I think using NumberFormatter is an easy way:
(Swift 5)
import Foundation
extension String {
private static let numberFormatter = NumberFormatter()
var isNumeric : Bool {
Self.numberFormatter.number(from: self) != nil
}
}
The correct way is to use the toInt() method of String, and an optional binding to determine whether the conversion succeeded or not. So your loop would look like:
let myArray = ["abc", "94761178","790"]
for val in myArray {
if let intValue = val.toInt() {
// It's an int
println(intValue)
} else {
// It's not an int
println(val)
}
}
The toInt() method returns an Int?, so an optional Int, which is nil if the string cannot be converted ton an integer, or an Int value (wrapped in the optional) if the conversion succeeds.
The method documentation (shown using CMD+click on toInt in Xcode) says:
If the string represents an integer that fits into an Int, returns the corresponding integer. This accepts strings that match the regular expression "[-+]?[0-9]+" only.
This way works also with strings with mixed numbers:
public extension String {
func isNumber() -> Bool {
return !self.isEmpty && self.rangeOfCharacter(from: CharacterSet.decimalDigits) != nil && self.rangeOfCharacter(from: CharacterSet.letters) == nil
}}
Swift 3.0 version
func isNumber(stringToTest : String) -> Bool {
let numberCharacters = CharacterSet.decimalDigits.inverted
return !s.isEmpty && s.rangeOfCharacter(from:numberCharacters) == nil
}
If you want to accept a more fine-grained approach (i.e. accept a number like 4.5 or 3e10), you proceed like this:
func isNumber(val: String) -> Bool
{
var result: Bool = false
let parseDotComNumberCharacterSet = NSMutableCharacterSet.decimalDigitCharacterSet()
parseDotComNumberCharacterSet.formUnionWithCharacterSet(NSCharacterSet(charactersInString: ".e"))
let noNumberCharacters = parseDotComNumberCharacterSet.invertedSet
if let v = val
{
result = !v.isEmpty && v.rangeOfCharacterFromSet(noNumberCharacters) == nil
}
return result
}
For even better resolution, you might draw on regular expression..
Xcode 8 and Swift 3.0
We can also check :
//MARK: - NUMERIC DIGITS
class func isString10Digits(ten_digits: String) -> Bool{
if !ten_digits.isEmpty {
let numberCharacters = NSCharacterSet.decimalDigits.inverted
return !ten_digits.isEmpty && ten_digits.rangeOfCharacter(from: numberCharacters) == nil
}
return false
}
This code works for me for Swift 3/4
func isNumber(textField: UITextField) -> Bool {
let allowedCharacters = CharacterSet.decimalDigits
let characterSet = CharacterSet(charactersIn: textField.text!)
return allowedCharacters.isSuperset(of: characterSet)
// return true
}
You can use this for integers of any length.
func getIntegerStrings(from givenStrings: [String]) -> [String]
{
var integerStrings = [String]()
for string in givenStrings
{
let isValidInteger = isInteger(givenString: string)
if isValidInteger { integerStrings.append(string) }
}
return integerStrings
}
func isInteger(givenString: String) -> Bool
{
var answer = true
givenString.forEach { answer = ("0"..."9").contains($0) && answer }
return answer
}
func getIntegers(from integerStrings: [String]) -> [Int]
{
let integers = integerStrings.compactMap { Int($0) }
return integers
}
let strings = ["abc", "94761178", "790", "18446744073709551615000000"]
let integerStrings = getIntegerStrings(from: strings)
let integers = getIntegers(from: integerStrings)
print(integerStrings) // ["94761178", "790", "18446744073709551615000000"]
print(integers) // [94761178, 790]
However, as pointed out by @Can, you can get the integer value for the number only up to 2^31 - 1 (signed integer limit on 32-bit arch). For the larger value, however, you will still get the string representation.
This code will return an array of converted integers:
["abc", "94761178","790"].map(Int.init) // returns [ nil, 94761178, 790 ]
OR
["abc", "94761178","790"].map { Int($0) ?? 0 } // returns [ 0, 94761178, 790 ]
Get the following isInteger() function from the below stackoverflow post posted by corsiKa: Determine if a String is an Integer in Java
And I think this is what you want to do (where nameOfArray is the array you want to pass)
void convertStrArrayToIntArray( int[] integerArray ) {
for (int i = 0; i < nameOfArray.length(); i++) {
if (!isInteger(nameOfArray[i])) {
integerArray[i] = nameOfArray[i].toString();
}
}
}