I am receiving a JSON object like this:
{"data":null,
"error":1,
"error_code":"InvalidSID",
"sid":"",
"num_rows_total":0,
"last_insert_id":0,
"error_info":"Comment...",
"error_data":[]}
and JSONKit using this code:
NSString *responseString = [request responseString];
NSDictionary *requestDictionary = [responseString objectFromJSONString];
if([[requestDictionary objectForKey:@"error"] intValue]) {
if([@"InvalidSID" isEqualToString:[requestDictionary objectForKey:@"error_code"]]) {
[self.navigationController popViewControllerAnimated:YES];
}
}
produces such output:
{
data = "<null>";
error = 1;
"error_code" = InvalidSID;
"error_data" = ();
"error_info" = "Comment...";
"last_insert_id" = 0;
"num_rows_total" = 0;
sid = "";
}
The problem is, that this if
statement is never called because of missing quotation marks around InvalidSID
. Is there any known problem with JSONKit that makes those quotation marks disappear?
You are confusing the "description" output from NSDictionary with the value of a key. You also could have saved yourself a lot of time (that is the time you posted this to the time you get some response) by using some simple detective work.
I assume that what you call "output" above is the result of
NSLog(@"%@", requestDictionary);
So after that line try this:
// Just to be complete
id ee = [requestDictionary objectForKey:@"error"];
NSLog(@"error=%@ intValueOfError=%d classOfErrorCode=%@",
ee, [ee intValue], NSStringFromClass([ee class]) );
// Where I suspect you may discover something
id ec = [requestDictionary objectForKey:@"error_code"];
NSLog(@"errorCode=%@ classOfErrorCode=%@",
ec, NSStringFromClass([ec class]) );
We do that since something is obviously wrong here, we want to find out more about the objects we have in hand. I am going to guess if you do the above you will discover something you did not expect.