You usually want to use NSInteger
when you don't know what kind of processor architecture your code might run on, so you may for some reason want the largest possible integer type, which on 32 bit systems is just an int
, while on a 64-bit system it's a long
.
I'd stick with using NSInteger
instead of int
/long
unless you specifically require them.
NSInteger
/NSUInteger
are defined as *dynamic typedef
*s to one of these types, and they are defined like this:
#if __LP64__ || TARGET_OS_EMBEDDED || TARGET_OS_IPHONE || TARGET_OS_WIN32 || NS_BUILD_32_LIKE_64
typedef long NSInteger;
typedef unsigned long NSUInteger;
#else
typedef int NSInteger;
typedef unsigned int NSUInteger;
#endif
With regard to the correct format specifier you should use for each of these types, see the String Programming Guide's section on Platform Dependencies
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