NSString: newline escape in plist

IphoneNsstringPlist

Iphone Problem Overview


I'm writing a property list to be in the resources bundle of my application. An NSString object in the plist needs to have line-breaks in it. I tried \n, but that doesn't work. What do I do to have newlines in my string in the plist?

Thanks.

Iphone Solutions


Solution 1 - Iphone

If you're editing the plist in Xcode's inbuild plist editor, you can press option-return to enter a line break within a string value.

Solution 2 - Iphone

I found a simpler solution:

NSString *newString = [oldString stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString:@"\\n" withString:@"\n"];

It seems the string reader escapes all characters that need to be escaped such that the text from the plist is rendered verbatim. This code effectively drops the extra escape.

Solution 3 - Iphone

Edit your plist using a text editor instead of Xcode's plist editor. Then you simply put line breaks in your strings directly:

<string>foo
bar</string>

Solution 4 - Iphone

a little late, but i discovered the same issue and i also discovered a fix or workaround. so for anyone who stumbles on this will get an answer :)

so the problem is when you read a string from a file, \n will be 2 characters unlike in xcode the compiler will recognize \n as one.

so i extended the NSString class like this:

"NSString+newLineToString.h":

@interface NSString(newLineToString)    
-(NSString*)newLineToString;   
@end

"NSString+newLineToString.m":

#import "NSString+newLineToString.h"

@implementation NSString(newLineToString)

-(NSString*)newLineToString
{
	NSString *string = @"";
	NSArray *chunks = [self componentsSeparatedByString: @"\\n"];
	
	for(id str in chunks){
		if([string isEqualToString:@""]){
			string = [NSString stringWithFormat:@"%@",str];
		}else{
			string = [NSString stringWithFormat:@"%@\n%@",string,str];
		}
		
	}
	return string;
} 
@end

How to use it:

rootDict = [[NSDictionary alloc]initWithContentsOfFile:[[NSBundle mainBundle] pathForResource:@"yourFile" ofType:@"plist"]];

NSString *string = [[rootDict objectForKey:@"myString"] newLineToString];

its quick and dirty, be aware that \\n in your file will not be recognize as \n so if you need to write \n on text you have to modify the method :)

Solution 5 - Iphone

This is how I do loading my plist in Swift 2.0:

plist:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE plist PUBLIC "-//Apple//DTD PLIST 1.0//EN" "http://www.apple.com/DTDs/PropertyList-1.0.dtd">
<plist version="1.0">
<dict>
	<key>STRING_TEXT</key>
	<string>This string contains an emoji and a double underscorešŸ˜Ž!__The double undescore is converted when the plist item is read.</string>
</dict>
</plist>

Swift 2.0:

import Foundation

var stringTextRaw = plistValueForString(keyname:"STRING_TEXT")
var stringText = stringTextRaw.stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString("__", withString: "\r")



func plistValueForString(keyname keyname:String) -> String {
  
  let filePath = NSBundle.mainBundle().pathForResource("StringsToUse", ofType:"plist")
  let plist = NSDictionary(contentsOfFile:filePath!)
  
  let value:String = plist?.objectForKey(keyname) as! String
  return value
}

So I first get the stored plist value into the xxRaw variable and then search for __ "double undescore" and replace that with "\r" ie carriage return for a newline and this is placed into the final variable.

Attributions

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Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionJonathan SterlingView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - IphoneDave AddeyView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - IphoneMihai DamianView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - IphoneJon ReidView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - IphonejustAfixView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - IphonesakumattoView Answer on Stackoverflow