Core Data Objects in Wrong Sections

NSFetchedResultsController is a really handy class. Use one of the default Core Data templates in Xcode and you’ll very quickly have a nice list of managed objects in a table view. With a few more lines of code you can get the NSFetchedResultsController to group your objects by sections. You do this by specifying a key-path in the class’s constructor method but there is another step that if overlooked will cause some confusion.

In a sample app I’ve created a food table that lists food in categories.

FetchedResultsController method grouping sections using a key-path:

Objective-C:

- (NSFetchedResultsController *)fetchedResultsController {
	if (fetchedResultsController != nil) {
		return fetchedResultsController;
	}

	// Create and configure a fetch request with the food entity.
	NSFetchRequest *fetchRequest = [[NSFetchRequest alloc] init];
	NSEntityDescription *entity = [NSEntityDescription entityForName:@"RWFood" inManagedObjectContext:managedObjectContext];
	[fetchRequest setEntity:entity];

	// Create the sort descriptors array.
	NSSortDescriptor *nameDescriptor = [[NSSortDescriptor alloc] initWithKey:@"name" ascending:YES];
	NSArray *sortDescriptors = [[NSArray alloc] initWithObjects:nameDescriptor, nil];
	[fetchRequest setSortDescriptors:sortDescriptors];

	// Create and initialize the fetch results controller.
	NSFetchedResultsController *aFetchedResultsController = [[NSFetchedResultsController alloc] initWithFetchRequest:fetchRequest managedObjectContext:managedObjectContext sectionNameKeyPath:@"category" cacheName:@"Food"];
	self.fetchedResultsController = aFetchedResultsController;
	fetchedResultsController.delegate = self;

	// Memory management.
	[aFetchedResultsController release];
	[fetchRequest release];
	[nameDescriptor release];
	[sortDescriptors release];

	return fetchedResultsController;
}

Swift:


lazy var fetchedResultsController: NSFetchedResultsController<rwfood> = {
    let fetchRequest: NSFetchRequest<rwfood> = RWFood.fetchRequest()
    let sortDescriptor = NSSortDescriptor(key: "name", ascending: true)
    fetchRequest.sortDescriptors = [sortDescriptor]
    let aFetchedResultsController = NSFetchedResultsController(fetchRequest: fetchRequest, managedObjectContext: managedObjectContext, sectionNameKeyPath: "category", cacheName: "Food")
    aFetchedResultsController.delegate = self
    do {
        try aFetchedResultsController.performFetch()
    } catch let error {
        print("Unable to perform fetch: \(error)")
    }
    return aFetchedResultsController
}()

Specify a key-path

Screenshot of Food sample app in wrong order.Save and quit the app a few times and you’ll see the objects seem to be in the wrong sections. If you look closer you’ll see that the objects are actually sorted in ascending name order. On looking at the code, it seems this is exactly what we asked the program to do! After some testing it also seems to show up more often if the table is a grouped one.

As per the docs, after you specify a key-path to group each section with you also need to make sure the first sort descriptor is sorting this key-path. Add a sort descriptor and everything will work as expected.

Revised fetchedResultsController method with missing sort descriptor:

Objective-C:

- (NSFetchedResultsController *)fetchedResultsController {

	if (fetchedResultsController != nil) {
		return fetchedResultsController;
	}

	// Create and configure a fetch request with the plant entity.
	NSFetchRequest *fetchRequest = [[NSFetchRequest alloc] init];
	NSEntityDescription *entity = [NSEntityDescription entityForName:@"RWPlant" inManagedObjectContext:managedObjectContext];
	[fetchRequest setEntity:entity];

	// Create the sort descriptors array.
	NSSortDescriptor *typeDescriptor = [[NSSortDescriptor alloc] initWithKey:@"type" ascending:YES];
	NSSortDescriptor *nameDescriptor = [[NSSortDescriptor alloc] initWithKey:@"name" ascending:YES];
	NSArray *sortDescriptors = [[NSArray alloc] initWithObjects:typeDescriptor, nameDescriptor, nil];
	[fetchRequest setSortDescriptors:sortDescriptors];

	// Create and initialize the fetch results controller.
	NSFetchedResultsController *aFetchedResultsController = [[NSFetchedResultsController alloc] initWithFetchRequest:fetchRequest managedObjectContext:managedObjectContext sectionNameKeyPath:@"type" cacheName:@"Plants"];
	self.fetchedResultsController = aFetchedResultsController;
	fetchedResultsController.delegate = self;

	// Memory management.
	[aFetchedResultsController release];
	[fetchRequest release];
        [categoryDescriptor release];
	[nameDescriptor release];
	[sortDescriptors release];

	return fetchedResultsController;
}

Swift:


lazy var fetchedResultsController: NSFetchedResultsController = {
    let fetchRequest: NSFetchRequest<rwplant> = RWPlant.fetchRequest()
    let typeDescriptor = NSSortDescriptor(key: "type", ascending: true)
    let nameDescriptor = NSSortDescriptor(key: "name", ascending: true)
    fetchRequest.sortDescriptors = [typeDescriptor, nameDescriptor]
    let aFetchedResultsController = NSFetchedResultsController(fetchRequest: fetchRequest, managedObjectContext: managedObjectContext, sectionNameKeyPath: "type", cacheName: "Plants")
    aFetchedResultsController.delegate = self
    do {
        try aFetchedResultsController.performFetch()
    } catch let error {
        print("Unable to perform fetch: \(error)")
    }
    return aFetchedResultsController
}()

Custom fonts on iPad and iPhone

Just incase you didn’t realise, with iOS 3.2 (iPad) and above you can load in custom fonts and use them with a standard UIFont object. There are a few catches… The font must be in the following format: –

  • OpenType Format (OTF)
  • TrueType Format (TTF)

Once you’ve dragged your chosen font file into an Xcode project, the next step is to add a line into the application’s Info.plist file. Add a new key UIAppFonts and make it an array. Expand the array and add a new string for each font, making the string the file’s full name including an extension.

Xcode Screenshot

You’re all set up now to use the font. That would be great if you knew which font it was! Here is a great little snippet for looping through all the fonts loaded into the system. Scan through the list and find your font.

Objective-C:

// Get all the fonts on the system
NSArray *familyNames = [UIFont familyNames];
for( NSString *familyName in familyNames ){
	printf( "Family: %s \n", [familyName UTF8String] );
	NSArray *fontNames = [UIFont fontNamesForFamilyName:familyName];
	for( NSString *fontName in fontNames ){
		printf( "\tFont: %s \n", [fontName UTF8String] );
	}
}

Swift:


// Get all the fonts on the system
UIFont.familyNames.forEach { familyName in
    print("Family: \(familyName)")
    UIFont.fontNames(forFamilyName: familyName).forEach { fontName in
        print("\tFont: \(fontName)")
    }
}

To use your font now, just use the standard UIFont constructor…

Objective-C:

self.titleLabel.font = [UIFont fontWithName:@"Inkpen Medium" size:31.0];

Swift:


self.titleLabel.font = UIFont(name: "Inkpen Medium", size: 31.0)

Some points to note: –

  • You can also use the font inside UIWebViews.
  • Interface Builder for XCode 3.2 has a bug that won’t let you choose the font. You have to do it in code.
  • Loading in too many fonts will slow your loading time down and will hurt your users’ eyes.

Re-ordering Core Data Objects on iOS4

The Core Data framework on the iPhone is incredibly powerful. It’s also incredibly efficient and part of that is because a collection of objects only have the order that you implicitly give them. For example you typically might give an Event object a timestamp and when you pull out all the events you might sort on that timestamp.

The NSFetchedResultsController is the main power house when dealing with such a scenario and is great for the master part of a master/detail data relationship. Its main purpose is to manage the results returned from a fetch request similar to the above and provide data for a UITableView via delegate methods. It reacts on the model level so if you delete an Event object, the NSFetchedResultsController informs its delegate and so updates the UITableView automatically. It’s very clever indeed!

As I found out earlier yesterday, the problem comes when you want to re-order the objects in a user-defined way. Instead of sorting on a timestamp, I wanted the user to be able to specify that one object should occur before the other… I’m working on an app that lets you place waypoints down on a map. Timestamps in waypoints aren’t much use. It’s much more critical that they have a specific order.

After some Googling I came across a useful article on CocoaIsMyGirlfriend. This helped me 90% of the way but I had problems when re-ordering. When you re-order the objects, the UITableView would move cells about seemingly at random. This is because NSFetchedResultsController is model-driven. When you re-order something using the tableview methods the view is already correct (because you’ve dragged and dropped the cell there – it’s a user-driven change) and so when the delegate detects your index changes, it walks all over your view believing the cells to be in their original position. The trick is to ‘disable’ the UI updates with a boolean in your delegate methods. Set the boolean just before your re-indexing and unset it afterwards.

For an example, see this stack overflow link on re-ordering.

Also have a look at what the Apple docs say on user-driven updates on the NSFetchedResultsController.