NSLog the method name with Objective-C in iPhone NSLog the method name with Objective-C in iPhone c c

NSLog the method name with Objective-C in iPhone


print(__FUNCTION__) // SwiftNSLog(@"%@", NSStringFromSelector(_cmd)); // Objective-C

Swift 3 and above

print(#function)


To technically answer your question, you want:

NSLog(@"<%@:%@:%d>", NSStringFromClass([self class]), NSStringFromSelector(_cmd), __LINE__);

Or you could also do:

NSLog(@"%s", __PRETTY_FUNCTION__);


tl;dr

NSLog( @"ERROR %@ METHOD %s:%d ", @"DescriptionGoesHere", __func__, __LINE__ );

Details

Apple has a Technical Q&A page: QA1669 - How can I add context information - such as the current method or line number - to my logging statements?

To assist with logging:

  • The C preprocessor provides a few macros.
  • Objective-C provides expressions (methods).
    • Pass the implicit argument for the current method's selector: _cmd

As other answers indicated, to merely get the current method's name, call:

NSStringFromSelector(_cmd)

To get the current method name and current line number, use these two macros __func__ and __LINE__ as seen here:

NSLog(@"%s:%d someObject=%@", __func__, __LINE__, someObject);

Another example… Snippets of code I keep in Xcode's Code Snippet Library:

NSLog( @"ERROR %@ METHOD %s:%d ", @"DescriptionGoesHere", __func__, __LINE__ );

…and TRACE instead of ERROR…

NSLog( @"TRACE %@ METHOD %s:%d ", @"DescriptionGoesHere", __func__, __LINE__ );

…and a longer one using a soft-coded description passing a value ([rows count])…

NSLog( @"TRACE %@ METHOD %s:%d.", [NSString stringWithFormat:@"'Table of Contents.txt' file's count of Linefeed-delimited rows: %u.", [rows count]] , __func__, __LINE__ );

Preprocessor macros for logging

Note the use of a pair of underscore characters around both sides of the macro.

| Macro                | Format   | Description  __func__               %s         Current function signature  __LINE__               %d         Current line number  __FILE__               %s         Full path to source file  __PRETTY_FUNCTION__    %s         Like __func__, but includes verbose                                    type information in C++ code. 

Expressions for logging

| Expression                       | Format   | Description  NSStringFromSelector(_cmd)         %@         Name of the current selector  NSStringFromClass([self class])    %@         Current object's class name  [[NSString                         %@         Source code file name    stringWithUTF8String:__FILE__]       lastPathComponent]   [NSThread callStackSymbols]        %@         NSArray of stack trace

Logging Frameworks

Some logging frameworks may help with getting current method or line number as well. I'm not sure, as I've used a great logging framework in Java (SLF4J + LogBack) but not Cocoa.

See this question for links to various Cocoa logging frameworks.

Name of Selector

If you have a Selector variable (a SEL), you can print its method name ("message") in either of two ways as described by this Codec blog post:

  • Using Objective-C call to NSStringFromSelector:
    NSLog(@"%@", NSStringFromSelector(selector) );
  • Using straight C:
    NSLog(@"%s", selector );

This information drawn from the linked Apple doc page as of 2013-07-19. That page had been last updated 2011-10-04.