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Home/ Questions/Q 268221
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T23:40:08+00:00 2026-05-11T23:40:08+00:00

C# has syntax that allows you to specify the argument index in a string

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C# has syntax that allows you to specify the argument index in a string format specifier, e.g.:

string message = string.Format("Hello, {0}. You are {1} years old. How does it feel to be {1}?", name, age);

You can use arguments more than once and also omit arguments that are provided from being used. Another question mentions the same formatting for C/C++ in the form of %[index]$[format], e.g. %1$i. I have not been able to get NSString to fully respect this syntax, because it does behave well when omitting arguments from the format. The following does not work as expected (EXC_BAD_ACCESS because it attempts to dereference the age parameter as a NSObject*):

int age = 23;
NSString * name = @"Joe";
NSString * message = [NSString stringWithFormat:@"Age: %2$i", name, age];

The positional arguments are respected only if there are no missing arguments from the format (which seems to be an odd requirement):

NSString * message = [NSString stringWithFormat:@"Age: %2$i; Name: %1$@", name, age];

All these calls work properly in OS X:

printf("Age: %2$i", [name UTF8String], age);
printf("Age: %2$i %1$s", [name UTF8String], age);

Is there a way of accomplishing this using NSString in Objective-C / Cocoa? It would be useful for localization purposes.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-11T23:40:08+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 11:40 pm

    NSString and CFString support reorderable/positional arguments.

    NSString *string = [NSString stringWithFormat: @"Second arg: %2$@, First arg %1$@", @"<1111>", @"<22222>"];
    NSLog(@"String = %@", string);
    

    Also, see the documentation at Apple: String Resources

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