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My objective here is really simple -- I'm trying to set an NSString to some test data, then return the class, which should be NSString. Here's my code:

NSString* stringer = [NSString stringWithFormat: @"Test"];
NSLog(@"%@", [stringer class]);

The log says that the class is NSCFString, not NSString. What's going on here?

jscs
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bloudermilk
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2 Answers2

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NSString is really a container class for different types of string objects. Generally an NSString constructor does return an object that is actually of type NSCFString, which is a thin wrapper around the Core Foundation CFString struct.

mipadi
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NSString is a class cluster, along with other Foundation types such as NSNumber and NSArray:

Class clusters are a design pattern that the Foundation framework makes extensive use of. Class clusters group a number of private, concrete subclasses under a public, abstract superclass. The grouping of classes in this way simplifies the publicly visible architecture of an object-oriented framework without reducing its functional richness. Class clusters are based on the Abstract Factory design pattern discussed in “Cocoa Design Patterns.”

Marc Charbonneau
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  • Why did Apple not follow this approach for NSOrderedSet? A NSOrderedSet behaves exactly like a NSArray at the interface level, yet they made a independent class for it. – Robert Jul 09 '12 at 13:48