It has to do with how variable argument lists work (va_list
, seen as ...
in the parameters). When the code is trying to extract all of the values in the list, it needs to know when to stop (because it doesn't know how many there are). We denote the end of the list with a special value called a "sentinel", which is usually NULL
. That way, when the processing code comes across a nil
in the va_list
, it knows that it's reached the end. If you leave out the nil
, you'll get strange errors, because the code will just keep on reading down the stack, interpreting things as objects, until it finds a nil
.
This is very similar to why C strings have to be NULL
-terminated.
As a side note, the stringWithFormat:
and similar printf
-style methods don't need a sentinel, because it figures out how many parameters it needs based on how many %
modifiers are in the format string. So if you give a format string of @"hello, %@"
, then it will only look for one extra argument, because there is only one % modifier.
与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…