RestKit object mapping failing in one project but not in Twitter example - iphone

Learning RESTKit.
Step 1: I have successfully run the Twitter example project.
Step 2: I have successfully modified the Twitter project to point to my own REST webservice... REST is able to interpret the results successfully, and map them to a custom object I built.
Step 3: I have created my own project space and copy-pasted the working code from Step 2 into this project with some minor edits, and strangely enough, RESTKit is failing to properly map the results. I am going crazy at this point.
Turning on the handy debugging traces included in RESTKit, both projects get to here:
2012-08-12 21:06:14.145 RKTwitter[9087:13003] D restkit.object_mapping:RKObjectMapper.m:320 Performing object mapping sourceObject
But Step2 Project gets this as the next message:
2012-08-12 21:06:14.294 RKTwitter[9087:13003] T restkit.object_mapping:RKObjectMapper.m:278 Examining keyPath '' for mappable content...
2012-08-12 21:06:14.301 RKTwitter[9087:13003] D restkit.object_mapping:RKObjectMapper.m:261 Found mappable collection at keyPath ''...
whereas my Step3 project gives up and dies:
2012-08-12 21:10:40.912 DogPark[9127:13203] D restkit.object_mapping:RKObjectMapper.m:351 The following operations are in the queue: ()
Rolled up my sleeves, and I have determined the precise point where the difference in code execution occurs within RESTKit:
In RKObjectMappingProvider.m, line 160 is the following method:
- (id)valueForContext:(RKObjectMappingProviderContext)context {
NSNumber *contextNumber = [NSNumber numberWithInteger:context];
return [mappingContexts objectForKey:contextNumber];
}
Which for Step2 returns a dictionary with 1 element in it, whereas my Step3 project returns a dictionary with 0 elements in it. This dictionary is used in RKObjectMapper.m, at line 332, where the foundMappable is either true for Step2 project or false for my Step3.
if ([mappingsForContext isKindOfClass:[NSDictionary class]]) {
results = [self performKeyPathMappingUsingMappingDictionary:mappingsForContext];
foundMappable = (results != nil);
Here is the code that seems correct but doesn't seem to want to run properly:
// init the Object Manager
RKURL *baseURL = [RKURL URLWithBaseURLString:SERVER_ADDRESS];
RKObjectManager *objectManager = [RKObjectManager objectManagerWithBaseURL:baseURL];
objectManager.client.baseURL = baseURL;
// Mapping
RKObjectMapping *ownerMapping = [RKObjectMapping mappingForClass: [DogOwner class]];
[ownerMapping mapKeyPath:#"DogOwnerId" toAttribute:#"dogOwnerID"];
[ownerMapping mapKeyPath:#"DogName" toAttribute:#"dogName"];
[ownerMapping mapKeyPath:#"OwnerFirstName" toAttribute:#"ownerFirstName"];
[[RKObjectManager sharedManager].mappingProvider setObjectMapping:ownerMapping forResourcePathPattern:#"/DogOwner"];
[[RKObjectManager sharedManager] loadObjectsAtResourcePath: #"/dogowner" delegate:self];
Any ideas?

Thank you for the very comical narration to your problem.
One mistake was specifying a mapping to /Dogowner and trying to load /dogowner. Your comment above also gives two other huge problems
xml and json are not interchangable
your source keypath was wrong.

Related

The model used to open the store is incompatible with the one used to create the store, apple store release version [duplicate]

I created a Core Data model in xcode 3.2 and after upgrading in Xcode 4.2, I then added a new entity of the NSManagedObject subclass (refer to the new entity).
First thing, it looks weird because it's not in the same group as the old one. Here is the picture on my xcode 4.2 (AlkitabDB is the one i created in xcode 3.2, EndeDB is the new one from current xcode version(4.2):
Second thing, I let it as it is, then I accessed the second entity (the new one) the same way as the first entity (the old one), and the error as titled appears.
Here is the error:
2012-01-16 21:13:38.496 iHuria[55953:207] Unresolved error Error Domain=NSCocoaErrorDomain Code=134100 "The operation couldn’t be completed. (Cocoa error 134100.)" UserInfo=0x8829cd0 {metadata=<CFBasicHash 0x882a370 [0x1839b38]>{type = immutable dict, count = 7,
entries =>
2 : <CFString 0x8829b90 [0x1839b38]>{contents = "NSStoreModelVersionIdentifiers"} = <CFArray 0x8829ff0 [0x1839b38]>{type = immutable, count = 0, values = ()}
4 : <CFString 0x8829bc0 [0x1839b38]>{contents = "NSPersistenceFrameworkVersion"} = <CFNumber 0x8829770 [0x1839b38]>{value = +320, type = kCFNumberSInt64Type}
6 : <CFString 0x8829bf0 [0x1839b38]>{contents = "NSStoreModelVersionHashes"} = <CFBasicHash 0x882a080 [0x1839b38]>{type = immutable dict, count = 1,
entries =>
0 : <CFString 0x882a010 [0x1839b38]>{contents = "AlkitabDB"} = <CFData 0x882a030 [0x1839b38]>{length = 32, capacity = 32, bytes = 0xd02ac5f8be6ab0b39add450aca202ac0 ... 3d45d462998d2ccd}
}
7 : <CFString 0x10e3aa8 [0x1839b38]>{contents = "NSStoreUUID"} = <CFString 0x8829e60 [0x1839b38]>{contents = "4F2EE7FF-463B-4055-BBED-8E603CDBDF59"}
8 : <CFString 0x10e3948 [0x1839b38]>{contents = "NSStoreType"} = <CFString 0x10e3958 [0x1839b38]>{contents = "SQLite"}
9 : <CFString 0x8829c40 [0x1839b38]>{contents = "NSStoreModelVersionHashesVersion"} = <CFNumber 0x6b1c7c0 [0x1839b38]>{value = +3, type = kCFNumberSInt32Type}
10 : <CFString 0x8829c70 [0x1839b38]>{contents = "_NSAutoVacuumLevel"} = <CFString 0x882a0c0 [0x1839b38]>{contents = "2"}
}
, reason=The model used to open the store is incompatible with the one used to create the store}, {
metadata = {
NSPersistenceFrameworkVersion = 320;
NSStoreModelVersionHashes = {
AlkitabDB = <d02ac5f8 be6ab0b3 9add450a ca202ac0 ebd1e860 cbb578c2 3d45d462 998d2ccd>;
};
NSStoreModelVersionHashesVersion = 3;
NSStoreModelVersionIdentifiers = (
);
NSStoreType = SQLite;
NSStoreUUID = "4F2EE7FF-463B-4055-BBED-8E603CDBDF59";
"_NSAutoVacuumLevel" = 2;
};
reason = "The model used to open the store is incompatible with the one used to create the store";
}
I looked for the solution before and discovered that I should remove the appliation from simulator and rerun the app, and it didn't work.
Does anyone know a solution for this issue?
Please help.
Deleting the app is sometimes not the case! Suggest, your app has already been published! You can't just add new entity to the data base and go ahead - you need to perform migration!
For those who doesn't want to dig into documentation and is searching for a quick fix:
Open your .xcdatamodeld file
click on Editor
select Add model version...
Add a new version of your model (the new group of datamodels added)
select the main file, open file inspector (right-hand panel)
and under Versioned core data model select your new version of data model for current data model
THAT'S NOT ALL ) You should perform so called "light migration".
Go to your AppDelegate and find where the persistentStoreCoordinator is being created
Find this line if (![_persistentStoreCoordinator addPersistentStoreWithType:NSSQLiteStoreType configuration:nil URL:storeURL options:nil error:&error])
Replace nil options with #{NSMigratePersistentStoresAutomaticallyOption:#YES, NSInferMappingModelAutomaticallyOption:#YES} (actually provided in the commented code in that method)
Here you go, have fun!
P.S. This only applies for lightweight migration. For your migration to qualify as a lightweight migration, your changes must be confined
to this narrow band:
Add or remove a property (attribute or relationship).
Make a nonoptional property optional.
Make an optional attribute nonoptional, as long as you provide a default value.
Add or remove an entity.
Rename a property.
Rename an entity.
For Swift 4
coordinator.addPersistentStore(ofType: NSSQLiteStoreType, configurationName: nil, at: url, options: [NSMigratePersistentStoresAutomaticallyOption: true, NSInferMappingModelAutomaticallyOption: true])
Remove the app from the simulator and perform a clean on your project. That should clear those issues up. Make sure that you are not running in the debugger when you delete the app or else it won't actually delete it properly.
If you want to be sure its gone, check this directory Users/INSERT_YOUR_USER_HERE/Library/Application Support/iPhone Simulator/ for your app's folder, under the version you're running.
Note: This is for development only. For production, you need to implement some sort of migration. Google "Core Data Migration", with lightweight migration being the simplest.
Just add Options attribute while creating persistentStoreCoordinator in AppDelegate.m file for the core data method as below
OBJECTIVE-C
- (NSPersistentStoreCoordinator *)persistentStoreCoordinator
{
if (_persistentStoreCoordinator != nil)
{
return _persistentStoreCoordinator;
}
NSLog(#"persistentStoreCoordinator___");
NSURL *storeURL = [[self applicationDocumentsDirectory] URLByAppendingPathComponent:#"MyApp.sqlite"];
NSMutableDictionary *options = [[NSMutableDictionary alloc] init];
[options setObject:[NSNumber numberWithBool:YES] forKey:NSMigratePersistentStoresAutomaticallyOption];
[options setObject:[NSNumber numberWithBool:YES] forKey:NSInferMappingModelAutomaticallyOption];
NSError *error = nil;
_persistentStoreCoordinator = [[NSPersistentStoreCoordinator alloc] initWithManagedObjectModel:[self managedObjectModel]];
if (![_persistentStoreCoordinator addPersistentStoreWithType:NSSQLiteStoreType configuration:nil URL:storeURL options:options error:&error])
{
NSLog(#"Unresolved error %#, %#", error, [error userInfo]);
abort();
}
NSLog(#"persistentStoreCoordinator___2");
return _persistentStoreCoordinator;
}
SWIFT
lazy var persistentStoreCoordinator: NSPersistentStoreCoordinator = {
// The persistent store coordinator for the application. This implementation creates and returns a coordinator, having added the store for the application to it. This property is optional since there are legitimate error conditions that could cause the creation of the store to fail.
// Create the coordinator and store
let coordinator = NSPersistentStoreCoordinator(managedObjectModel: self.managedObjectModel)
let url = self.applicationDocumentsDirectory.URLByAppendingPathComponent("SingleViewCoreData.sqlite")
var failureReason = "There was an error creating or loading the application's saved data."
// MAIN LINE OF CODE TO ADD
let mOptions = [NSMigratePersistentStoresAutomaticallyOption: true,
NSInferMappingModelAutomaticallyOption: true]
do {
try coordinator.addPersistentStoreWithType(NSSQLiteStoreType, configuration: nil, URL: url, options: mOptions)
} catch {
// Report any error we got.
var dict = [String: AnyObject]()
dict[NSLocalizedDescriptionKey] = "Failed to initialize the application's saved data"
dict[NSLocalizedFailureReasonErrorKey] = failureReason
dict[NSUnderlyingErrorKey] = error as NSError
let wrappedError = NSError(domain: "YOUR_ERROR_DOMAIN", code: 9999, userInfo: dict)
// Replace this with code to handle the error appropriately.
// abort() causes the application to generate a crash log and terminate. You should not use this function in a shipping application, although it may be useful during development.
NSLog("Unresolved error \(wrappedError), \(wrappedError.userInfo)")
abort()
}
return coordinator
}
It had solved my problem..
Answer : Remove the app from the Simulator , Perform a Clean and Re-Build your Project.
Note : Whenever you perform changes to the Core Data definition, Delete the app installed on the Physical Device or Simulator, Clean the Project and Re-Build again.
Yes. Once you delete app on physical device and rebuild it works.
For swift, in AppDelegate.swift find the line
try coordinator!.addPersistentStoreWithType(NSXMLStoreType, configuration: nil, URL: url, options: nil )
and replace it with
try coordinator!.addPersistentStoreWithType(NSXMLStoreType, configuration: nil, URL: url, options: [NSMigratePersistentStoresAutomaticallyOption: true, NSInferMappingModelAutomaticallyOption: true])
I just spent several days fighting this error, as well as mergedModelFromBundles crashes, and getting the "Can't merge models with two different entities named *" error.
It turns out the root problem was that Xcode doesn't remove old resources from devices and I had old versions of my data model (.mom files) that were causing conflicts. This is why deleting the app fixed the problem on one of my devices.
After finding this blog post via another SO answer I made my app more tolerant of old models by changing this line which looks for ALL .mom files:
NSManagedObjectModel *model = [NSManagedObjectModel mergedModelFromBundles:nil];
to this, which only looks in the Filters directory:
NSString *path = [[NSBundle mainBundle] pathForResource:#"Filters" ofType:#"momd"];
NSURL *momURL = [NSURL fileURLWithPath:path];
NSManagedObjectModel *model = [[NSManagedObjectModel alloc] initWithContentsOfURL:momURL];
I used recursivePathsForResourcesOfType from this so question: to help figure this out by logging all of the .mom files in the app:
NSArray *momPaths = [self recursivePathsForResourcesOfType:#"mom" inDirectory:[[NSBundle mainBundle] resourcePath]];
NSLog(#"All .mom files:%#",momPaths);
I also used iExplorer to look at the extraneous .mom files (I didn't try deleting them yet).
The method below was also helpful. It showed that an entity was in the merged model returned by [psc managedObjectModel] that didn't exist any more in any of my models or in the store itself. This was what let me to believe an old model was being cached on the device itself that clean building didn't remove. The method logs each entity that is the same, been changed, or added to, or removed from the model. (written with this SO answer as a starting point):
- (BOOL)comparePersistentStore:(NSPersistentStoreCoordinator *)psc withStoreURL: (NSURL *)storeURL {
NSError *error = nil;
// Get the entities & keys from the persistent store coordinator
NSManagedObjectModel *pscModel = [psc managedObjectModel];
NSDictionary *pscEntities = [pscModel entitiesByName];
NSSet *pscKeys = [NSSet setWithArray:[pscEntities allKeys]];
//NSLog(#"psc model:%#", pscModel);
//NSLog(#"psc keys:%#", pscKeys);
NSLog(#"psc contains %d entities", [pscModel.entities count]);
// Get the entity hashes from the storeURL
NSDictionary *storeMetadata = [NSPersistentStoreCoordinator metadataForPersistentStoreOfType:NSSQLiteStoreType
URL:storeURL
error:&error];
NSDictionary *storeHashes = [storeMetadata objectForKey:#"NSStoreModelVersionHashes"];
//NSLog(#"store metadata:%#", sourceMetadata);
NSLog(#"store URL:%#", storeURL);
NSLog(#"store NSStoreUUID:%#", [storeMetadata objectForKey:#"NSStoreUUID"]);
NSLog(#"store NSStoreType:%#", [storeMetadata objectForKey:#"NSStoreType"]);
NSSet *storeKeys = [NSSet setWithArray:[storeHashes allKeys]];
// Determine store entities that were added, removed, and in common (to/with psc)
NSMutableSet *addedEntities = [NSMutableSet setWithSet:pscKeys];
NSMutableSet *removedEntities = [NSMutableSet setWithSet:storeKeys];
NSMutableSet *commonEntities = [NSMutableSet setWithSet:pscKeys];
NSMutableSet *changedEntities = [NSMutableSet new];
[addedEntities minusSet:storeKeys];
[removedEntities minusSet:pscKeys];
[commonEntities minusSet:removedEntities];
[commonEntities minusSet:addedEntities];
// Determine entities that have changed (with different hashes)
[commonEntities enumerateObjectsUsingBlock:^(NSString *key, BOOL *stop) {
NSData *storeHash = [storeHashes objectForKey:key];
NSEntityDescription *pscDescrip = [pscEntities objectForKey:key];
if ( ! [pscDescrip.versionHash isEqualToData:storeHash]) {
if (storeHash != nil && pscDescrip.versionHash != nil) {
[changedEntities addObject:key];
}
}
}];
// Remove changed entities from common list
[commonEntities minusSet:changedEntities];
if ([commonEntities count] > 0) {
NSLog(#"Common entities:");
[commonEntities enumerateObjectsUsingBlock:^(NSString *key, BOOL *stop) {
NSData *storeHash = [storeHashes objectForKey:key];
NSEntityDescription *pscDescrip = [pscEntities objectForKey:key];
NSLog(#"\t%#:\t%#", key, pscDescrip.versionHash);
}];
}
if ([changedEntities count] > 0) {
NSLog(#"Changed entities:");
[changedEntities enumerateObjectsUsingBlock:^(NSString *key, BOOL *stop) {
NSData *storeHash = [storeHashes objectForKey:key];
NSEntityDescription *pscDescrip = [pscEntities objectForKey:key];
NSLog(#"\tpsc %#:\t%#", key, pscDescrip.versionHash);
NSLog(#"\tstore %#:\t%#", key, storeHash);
}];
}
if ([addedEntities count] > 0) {
NSLog(#"Added entities to psc model (not in store):");
[addedEntities enumerateObjectsUsingBlock:^(NSString *key, BOOL *stop) {
NSEntityDescription *pscDescrip = [pscEntities objectForKey:key];
NSLog(#"\t%#:\t%#", key, pscDescrip.versionHash);
}];
}
if ([removedEntities count] > 0) {
NSLog(#"Removed entities from psc model (exist in store):");
[removedEntities enumerateObjectsUsingBlock:^(NSString *key, BOOL *stop) {
NSData *storeHash = [storeHashes objectForKey:key];
NSLog(#"\t%#:\t%#", key, storeHash);
}];
}
BOOL pscCompatibile = [pscModel isConfiguration:nil compatibleWithStoreMetadata:storeMetadata];
NSLog(#"Migration needed? %#", pscCompatibile?#"no":#"yes");
return pscCompatibile;
}
usage: called before adding each store to NSPersistentStoreCoordinator :
[self comparePersistentStore:self.psc withStoreURL:self.iCloudStoreURL];
_iCloudStore = [self.psc addPersistentStoreWithType:NSSQLiteStoreType
configuration:nil
URL:self.iCloudStoreURL
options:options
error:&localError];
Every time you making change to the Core Date definition, you should delete the apps installed on the physical device or simulator.
Stop app from running.
Delete app on simulator.
Product - > Clean
Build, run.
The simplest solution that worked for me in Swift 2.1, Xcode 7 is :
Delete the app from the Simulator ( Cmd + Shift + H to go to the Home Screen. Long Press the app, Click cross, just the usual way you delete an app from your phone)
Cmd + Shift + H again to stop the dancing of apps
Go back to your project and rerun
I had this issue while writing/reading from Core Data with 2 entities set up. Deleting the app and rerunning the program fixed the issue
I just deleted [Simulator App Folder]/Document/*.sqlite file after making changes in entities and it worked.
And of course, .sqlite file contains all stored data and structures which will be lost.
Please Delete a application from simulator and clean a code and run .its work fine .do it may be its help YOU.
If you are using Swift.
Follow the answer by #Stas and insert options, in place of nil, in your App Delegate:
let myOptions = [NSMigratePersistentStoresAutomaticallyOption: true,
NSInferMappingModelAutomaticallyOption: true]
if coordinator!.addPersistentStoreWithType(NSSQLiteStoreType, configuration: nil, URL: url, options: myOptions, error: &error) == nil {
Try "Reset Content & Settings" in the simulator. Worked for me after deleting app and Clean build
I experienced the same issue with my app (not yet released in App Store).
Here's how I fixed it:
Run Clean (Cmd+Shift+K)
Restart iOS Simulator
iOS Simulator -> Reset Content and Settings (from navbar)
(3) was the step that finally got it to run properly. Hope this helps!
In my case, I had two persistent stores, one local store for user specific data, and one CoreData+CloudKit store for common data that syncs automatically with iCloud. Thus the data model has two configurations, and the entities are assigned to both configurations as required.
Due to a bug during development, I tried to store an entity that was no longer assigned to any configuration. So when the context was saved, CoreData realized the incompatibility, and crashed with this error.
Of course, deleting the app does not help in such a case. One has to ensure that only assigned entities are stored in a persistent store.
Although sometimes you can just remove the app from the device when changing schema in managed object model, in some scenarios this is not possible e.g. because you already published your app with an old schema.
If this is the case, you have to take care of migrating old data to the new schema:
Core Data Model Versioning and Data Migration
You'll need to migrate the Core Data model using migration. Any time you change the model, you make it incompatible without versioning. Strap yourself in, it's a bit of a hairy topic.
http://developer.apple.com/library/ios/#documentation/cocoa/Conceptual/CoreDataVersioning/Articles/Introduction.html
If you make changes to your Core Data model, you have to provide a migration policy that tells Core Data how to adopt existing persisted objects (that your users created with the currently released version) to the new model.
For some scenarios, Core Data is able to automatically infer the mapping from the old model to the new one. For more complex changes, you might have to implement some logic that performs the migration.
Details can be found in the Core Data Model Versioning and Data Migration Programming Guide.
Update
This answer here on Stack Overflow covers the basics of Core Data's lightweight migration and also has some code to get you started.
First, the only things that should be in the xcdatamodeld bundle are xcdatamodel files. Your subclasses should NOT be in the xcdatamodeld. Move those out of there. There is a fair chance they are confusing the compiler.
Second, the error indicates that Core Data cannot find your model. Have you created data and then touched the model? If so you are in an inconsistent state and need to fix that either by deleting the data (which Philippe suggested) or by rolling your changes of the model BACK.
This issue generally occurs due to incompatibility between the version on which DB has been created. General approach to this problem is to delete the app and reinstall it. But in your mentioned case the version of DB are completely different on Xcode 3.2 and 4.2. So better use same version of Xcode for DB.
I was getting the error but the reason I was getting the error was because of the following.
I originally had one Entity named "Entry" and had one row saved for that entity in the database. I then added another Entity named "Person" and after adding that went to build and got the error. So I solved the issue by deleting "Person" Entity and then building the app, deleted the row that was in "Entry" and then closed the application. I then deleted the app entirely off my phone and then did a rebuild and it worked fine. Not sure which step corrected the problem (the deletion of the row or the app), but hopefully if you're looking for a solution this will help. :)
Edit: Oh and if you worried about deleting your new Entity (in my case "Person") to build the app again remember you can get it back afterwards by using CMD+Z!
I had this problem - I first reset my simulator and then clean the project and rebuild. And then it works.
When you change core data, ( adding a field to table , removing field etc ), the sqlite file in applications document folder needs to be in sync with your schema.
This file is not overwritten by default, this file needs to be regenerated.
Follow these steps:
Go to the folder pointed by NSURL. (This path can be found in exception message generated by application before crashing.)
example : /Users//Library/Application Support/iPhone Simulator//Applications//Documents
remove or rename the sqlite file
Clean and Rerun the application
Rerunning application would generate a new sqlite file.
This will make sure that the schema and Xcode are in sync.
This may help some people but may not answer the question. In my case, the problem was solved because I forgot to add the model to the correct configuration. See the screenshot attached. All the models are added to the default configuration, but my application uses the private configuration. Drag and drop your model from the default configuration to the correct configuration.
iOS Simulator -> Reset Contents and Settings...
Worked for me
iOS Simulator -> Reset Contents and Settings... -> Reset
Works on iOS9 (xcode 7.1) as well

Using Obj-C generated code using WSDLToObj-c Tool

From my application i need to call a web service to get the list of books in a server. For this purpose the following WSDL link is provided http://demo.kitaboo.com/eBookServices/services/ListOfBooksService?wsdl
Using the WSDL2ObjC Tool available at http://code.google.com/p/wsdl2objc/downloads/list i've generated the equivalent objective-C code for the given WSDL url.
This is the link which i referred while implementing to call the web service.
#import "MyWebService.h"
MyWebServiceBinding *binding = [MyWebService MyWebServiceBinding];
binding.logXMLInOut = YES;
ns1_MyOperationRequest *request = [[ns1_MyOperationRequest new] autorelease];
request.attribute = #"attributeValue";
request.element = [[ns1_MyElement new] autorelease];
request.element.value = #"elementValue"];
MyWebServiceBindingResponse *response = [binding myOperationUsingParameters:request];
NSArray *responseHeaders = response.headers;
NSArray *responseBodyParts = response.bodyParts;
for(id header in responseHeaders) {
if([header isKindOfClass:[ns2_MyHeaderResponse class]]) {
ns2_MyHeaderResponse *headerResponse = (ns2_MyHeaderResponse*)header;
// ... Handle ns2_MyHeaderResponse ...
}
}
for(id bodyPart in responseBodyParts) {
if([bodyPart isKindOfClass:[ns2_MyBodyResponse class]]) {
ns2_MyBodyResponse *body = (ns2_MyBodyResponse*)bodyPart;
// ... Handle ns2_MyBodyResponse ...
}
}
I'm unable to interrelate the terms such as (ns1_MyOperationRequest, MyWebServiceBindingResponse, myOperationUsingParameters) that are present in the code.
Any idea on how to go about doing this?
EDIT for your updated question:
In your header file, add the ListOfBooksServiceSoapBindingResponseDelegate and also implement - (void) operation:(ListOfBooksServiceSoapBindingOperation *)operation completedWithResponse:(ListOfBooksServiceSoapBindingResponse *)response;
Check the instructions:
Once you obtain WSDL2ObjC, code generation is pretty simple.
Launch the app
Browse to a WSDL file or enter in a URL
Browse to an output directory
Click "Parse WSDL"
Source code files will be added to the output directory you've
specified. There will be one pair of .h/.m files for each namespace in
your WSDL.
In case you didn't notice, you must have downloaded a standalone WSDL2ObjC.app. The window looks like this:
Just enter your WSDL link in link and get the code
http://sudzc.com/

iPhone SDK: XML mystery, after adding child nodeforXPath returns nothing (found a hacky solution)

I have a big mystery here,
I have a Gdataxml document property:
GDataXMLDocument *doc;
I'm adding a new element to doc, interestingly, this method below looks perfect for other elements but not for the element I just added:
GDataXMLElement *newValueDefElement = [GDataXMLNode elementWithName:#"valuedefinition"];
[variableElement addChild:newValueDefElement];
and now when I query:
NSString *path = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"//inferenceresponse/state/variable[pageId=%d]/valuedefinition",pageID];
NSArray *valueElement = [self.doc nodesForXPath:path error:nil];
Now array comes with zero objects! new added element NOT found! but I can see it in debug as xml string, how on earth it can not find something which I can see it is there on the log? it is a cache problem or a namespace problem or a bug in GDataXML? again..Problem is adding a new child and it is somehow not updated in the doc, but I can get the other elements under same root when use the same Xpath query standard
in NSlog I can see that the new element is added to doc.
NSData *xmlData2 = self.doc.XMLData;
NSString *s= [[[NSString alloc] initWithBytes:[xmlData2 bytes] length:[xmlData2 length] encoding:NSUTF8StringEncoding] autorelease];
NSLog(s);
Also How can self.doc.XMLData give something different than [self.doc nodesForXPath]? so it fools me to thing my doc is ok but maybe I corrupted the doc or a wrong namespace while adding removing some elements in a previous method?
my xml starts like this:
<SOAP-ENV:Envelope xmlns:SOAP-ENV="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/">
<SOAP-ENV:Header/>
<SOAP-ENV:Body>
<inferenceresponse xmlns="">
<state goalreached="false">
..
..
Update
I just found a (hacky) solution; when I convert "doc" to NSData with "doc.XMLData" and then again convert back to doc, then it works! but this should not be real solution, that's lame to do that conversion back and forth to get a correct document object. What is the problem here? I guess it can not fix the namespaces for new child.
Your problem is here:
<inferenceresponse xmlns="">
The empty namespace attribute is obviously confusing the libxml XPath evaluation. If you step through GDataXMLNode's nodesForXPath:namespaces:error:, xmlXPathEval indeed returns an empty nodes set.
If you have control over the XML generation, I've got correct XPath results removing the empty attribute.
<inferenceresponse>
If modifying the server response is too hard, you can edit GDataXMLNode.m:
Find the method fixQualifiedNamesForNode:graftingToTreeNode: in GDataXMLNode implementation and replace the line
if (foundNS != NULL) {
// we found a namespace, so fix the ns pointer and the local name
with
if (foundNS != NULL && foundNS->href != NULL && strlen((char *)foundNS->href) != 0) {
// we found a namespace, so fix the ns pointer and the local name

Core data only storing last object of JSON feed

I´m using Core Data as local storage in my app. I´ve set it up properly and made subclasses of NSManagedObject for each entity. However, when I´m trying to insert values into my store, it only inserts the last object from my JSON feed.
res = [JSONHandler requestJSONResponse:jsonString];
shows = [res valueForKeyPath:#"Show.Name"];
NSUInteger showIndex = 0;
for(NSString *showName in shows){
showObject = [NSEntityDescription insertNewObjectForEntityForName:#"Show" inManagedObjectContext:managedObjectContext_];
showObject.name = showName;
showObject.iD = [[res valueForKeyPath:#"Show.Id"]objectAtIndex:showIndex];
showObject.desc = [[res valueForKeyPath:#"Show.Description"]objectAtIndex:showIndex];
showObject.activityType = [[res valueForKeyPath:#"Show.ActivityType"]objectAtIndex:showIndex];
showIndex++;
}
This only stores the last object from my JSON feed. Any idea why?
EDIT: It works fine when I do this:
res = [JSONHandler requestJSONResponse:jsonString];
shows = [res valueForKeyPath:#"Show.Name"];
NSUInteger index = 0;
for(NSString *showName in shows){
show = [NSEntityDescription insertNewObjectForEntityForName:#"Show" inManagedObjectContext:managedObjectContext_];
[show setValue:showName forKey:#"name"];
[show setValue:[[res valueForKeyPath:#"Show.Id"]objectAtIndex:index] forKey:#"iD"];
[show setValue:[[res valueForKeyPath:#"Show.Description"]objectAtIndex:index] forKey:#"desc"];
[show setValue:[[res valueForKeyPath:#"Show.ActivityType"]objectAtIndex:index] forKey:#"activityType"];
index++;
}
It´s basically the same thing, isn´t it? But I want to use subclasses of NSManagedObject instead of doing like I did above. Because in the snippet above show is NSManagedObject *show instead of what it should be: Show *show.
How many shows are there? You can find this by doing: NSLog(#"Number of shows: %d.", shows.count);, assuming that shows is an NSArray. It could be that your Core Data code is fine and the JSON parsing itself is at fault.
EDIT: Also, are you correctly saving the changes to the persistent store?
Usually when you see just one of several objects being saved like this, the problem is that a relationship that should be to-many is improperly set as to-one. No matter how many objects you try to add to the relationship, only the last one is set because the relationship can hold only one value.
I think in this circumstance the problem is most likely in the code of the custom subclass instead of the data model itself given that the data model works with generic NSManagedObjects.

iPhone SDK Core Data relationships problem

I'm having a problem with relationships between to entities in Core Data. I'm parsing some JSON and adding the entities:
if ([hourSets isKindOfClass:[NSArray class]]) { // check to see that we have got some hours back
for (NSDictionary *hourSet in hourSets) {
Hourset *thisHourSet = (Hourset *)[NSEntityDescription
insertNewObjectForEntityForName:#"Hourset"
inManagedObjectContext:managedObjectContext];
[thisHourSet setStartDate:[hourSet objectForKey:#"start_date"]];
[thisHourSet setEndDate:[hourSet objectForKey:#"end_date"]];
[record addHoursetsObject:thisHourSet];
}
}
...and then later trying to grab them again:
NSSet *hourSets = [self.listing valueForKeyPath:#"hoursets.hourset"];
NSLog(#"There are %# hourSets", [hourSets count]);
I'm getting Program received signal: “EXC_BAD_ACCESS”. when trying to access that hourSets NSSet in any way, including just counting the items in it.
Any suggestions? Pretty stumped. Thanks!
I am inferring your entity graph here but:
[self.listing valueForKeyPath:#"hoursets.hourset"]
... translates to a keypath of listing.hoursets.hourset which does not appear to return a set. Both the first and last elements are singular and therefore by convention not sets.
I would suggest logging the class of the return to confirm what, if anything, you're getting back.
Update:
(Forehead slap) The problem is actually the log statement itself. It should be:
NSLog(#"There are %d hourSets", [hourSets count]);
... because count returns an NSUInteger.