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iOS Objective-C Basics Basic Data Types and Variables Numerical Data Types: ints, floats and doubles

Explaining Different Token Naming Conventions

Hi all, I'm going through Gabe's Objective C class, and he's starting to use different tokens like %i and %f. At first I thought he was just using letters that corresponded with the token data type, like %i for int etc., but then I noticed that he was getting errors in his code when he changed a data type from int to float. Can someone explain to me more about the different token naming conventions? Thanks.

1 Answer

Jason Anders
MOD
Jason Anders
Treehouse Moderator 145,860 Points

Hey there,

You're pretty much correct in that each one is specific to the type. For example %i is for an Integer... %f is for a float... %s is for a string... etc. So if he had %i and then changed the type to a float, an error would be thrown, because the format specifier is expecting an integer.

You can see the different format specifiers on the Apple Dev site.

Hope that help to clear it up for you. :)

:dizzy:

I was thinking that a float value is still mathematically an integer value, but in code they're very different! :D