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ActiveRecord Fetching for Core Data

In software engineering, the active record pattern is a design pattern found in software that stores its data in relational databases. It was named by Martin Fowler in his book Patterns of Enterprise Application Architecture. The interface to such an object would include functions such as Insert, Update, and Delete, plus properties that correspond more-or-less directly to the columns in the underlying database table.

Active record is an approach to accessing data in a database. A database table or view is wrapped into a class; thus an object instance is tied to a single row in the table. After creation of an object, a new row is added to the table upon save. Any object loaded gets its information from the database; when an object is updated, the corresponding row in the table is also updated. The wrapper class implements accessor methods or properties for each column in the table or view.

-- From Wikipedia

Active Record for Core Data was inspired by the ease of Ruby on Rails' Active Record fetching. The goals of this code are:

  • Clean up my Core Data related code
  • Allow for clear, simple, one-line fetches
  • Still allow the modification of the NSFetchRequest when request optimizations are needed

See amazing examples of before and after using the code

Installation

  1. In your XCode Project, add all the .h and .m files into your project.
  2. Add the proper import states for the .h files either to your specific files using Core Data, or in your pre-compiled header file
  3. Start writing code! ... There is no step 3!

Usage

Setting up the Core Data Stack

To get started, first, import the header file "CoreData+ActiveRecordFetching.h" in your project's pch file. This will allow a global include of all the required headers. Next, somewhere in your app's startup, say in the applicationDidFinishLaunching:(UIApplication *) withOptions:(NSDictionary *) method, use one of the following setup calls with the ActiveRecordHelpers class:

  • + (void) setupDefaultCoreDataStack;
  • + (void) setupAutoMigratingDefaultCoreDataStack;
  • + (void) setupCoreDataStackWithInMemoryStore;
  • + (void) setupDefaultCoreDataStackWithStoreNamed:(NSString *)storeName;
  • + (void) setupCoreDataStackWithAutoMigratingSqliteStoreNamed:(NSString *)storeName;

And, before your app exits, you can use the clean up method:

[ActiveRecordHelpers cleanUp];

Default Managed Object Context

When using Core Data, you will deal with two types of objects the most: NSManagedObject and NSManagedObjectContext. ActiveRecord for Core Data gives you a place for a default NSManagedObjectContext for use within your app. This is great for single threaded apps. If you need to create a new Managed Object Context for use in other threads, based on your single persistent store, use:

NSManagedObjectContext *myNewContext = [NSManagedObjectContext context];

You can then take this context, and set it as the default. This default context will be used for all fetch requests, unless otherwise specified in the methods ending with "inContext:".

[NSManagedObjectContext setDefaultContext:myNewContext];

This will use the same object model and persistent store, but create an entirely new context for use with threads other than the main thread.

It is recommended that the default context is created and set using the main thread

Fetching

Basic Finding

Most methods in the ActiveRecord for Core Data library return an NSArray of results. So, if you have an Entity called Person, related to a Department (as seen in various Apple Core Data documentation), to get all the Person entities from your Persistent Store:

NSArray *people = [Person findAll];

Or, to have the results sorted by a property:

NSArray *peopleSorted = [Person findAllSortedByProperty:@"LastName" ascending:YES];

If you have a unique way of retrieving a single object from your data store, you can get that object directly:

Person *person = [Person findFirstByAttribute:@"FirstName" withValue:@"Forrest"];

Advanced Finding

If you want to be more specific with your search, you can send in a predicate:

NSArray *departments = [NSArray arrayWithObjects:dept1, dept2, ..., nil];
NSPredicate *peopleFilter = [NSPredicate predicateWithFormat:@"Department IN %@", departments];

NSArray *people = [Person findAllWithPredicate:peopleFilter];

Returning an NSFetchRequest

NSPredicate *peopleFilter = [NSPredicate predicateWithFormat:@"Department IN %@", departments];

NSArray *people = [Person fetchAllWithPredicate:peopleFilter];

For each of these single line calls, the full stack of NSFetchRequest, NSSortDescriptors and a simple default error handling scheme (ie. logging to the console) is created.

Customizing the Request

NSPredicate *peopleFilter = [NSPredicate predicateWithFormat:@"Department IN %@", departments];

NSFetchRequest *peopleRequest = [Person requestAllWithPredicate:peopleFilter];
[peopleRequest setReturnsDistinctResults:NO];
[peopleRequest setReturnPropertiesNamed:[NSArray arrayWithObjects:@"FirstName", @"LastName", nil]];
...

NSArray *people = [Person executeFetchRequest:peopleRequest];

Find the number of entities

You can also perform a count of entities in your Store, that will be performed on the Store

NSUInteger count = [Person numberOfEntities];

Or, if you're looking for a count of entities based on a predicate:

NSUInteger count = [Person numberOfEntitiesWithPredicate:...];

Finding from a different context

All find, fetch and request methods have an inContext: method parameter

NSManagedObjectContext *someOtherContext = ...;

NSArray *peopleFromAnotherContext = [Person findAllInContext:someOtherContext];

...

Person *personFromContext = [Person findFirstByAttribute:@"lastName" withValue:@"Gump" inContext:someOtherContext];

...

NSUInteger count = [Person numberOfEntitiesInContext:someOtherContext];

Extra Bits

This Code is released under the MIT License by Magical Panda Software, LLC. Magical Panda Software is an iPhone consulting firm based out of Phoenix, Arizona ready to tackle your data driven applications.

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