If been trying to figure this out for ages now and my mind is gone to mush.
What I want to do is store a hex value in NSData in a plist. I then want to be able to read the hex back out.
I have gotten very confused.
So I try to store the hex value 0x1124
.
When I look in the plist that gets made the value says 24110000
.
And When I print this value I get 23FA0
What I want to be able to do is confirm that 0x1124 gets written to my plist and make sure I can print back out the right value.
Im getting the feeling that Im lacking some very fundamental stuff here.
NSMutableDictionary *tempDict=[NSMutableDictionary new];
// Byte hidService= 1124;
//int hidService= 00001124-0000-1000-8000-00805f9b34fb
unsigned int hidService[]={0x1124};
NSData *classlist=[NSData dataWithBytes:&hidService length:sizeof(hidService)];
NSArray *classListArray=@[classlist];
[tempDict setValue:classListArray forKey:kServiceItemKeyServiceClassIDList];
hidProfileDict=[[NSDictionary alloc]initWithDictionary:tempDict];
NSLog(@"%X",[hidProfileDict valueForKey:kServiceItemKeyServiceClassIDList][0]);
NSError *error;
NSArray *paths = NSSearchPathForDirectoriesInDomains(NSDocumentDirectory, NSUserDomainMask, YES);
NSString *documentsDirectory = [paths objectAtIndex:0];
NSFileManager *fileManager=[NSFileManager defaultManager];
NSString *plistPath = [documentsDirectory stringByAppendingPathComponent:@"HIDDictionary.plist"];
if (![fileManager fileExistsAtPath: plistPath])
{
NSString *bundle = [[NSBundle mainBundle] pathForResource:@"HIDDictionary" ofType:@"plist"];
[fileManager copyItemAtPath:bundle toPath:plistPath error:&error];
}
[hidProfileDict writeToFile:plistPath atomically: YES];
0x1124
is just a hex representation of the binary bits 0001000100100100 or decimal number 4388. The 0x is just a way to designate the base of the display, it is not part of the number. The number could be expressed in a program in binary with a 0b prefix: int b = 0b0001000100100100;
. These are all just different representations of the same number.
To add a number to a NSDictionary
or NSArray
you need to convert it to an NSNumber
, the easiest way is to use literal syntax: @(0x1124)
or @(4388)
.
Ex:
NSArray *a = @[@(0x1124)];
or
NSDictionary *d = @{kServiceItemKeyServiceClassIDList:@(0x1124)};
// Where kServiceItemKeyServiceClassIDList is defined to be a `NSString`.