The application is a simple to-do list so I've got a mutable array of custom objects.
Here's an interface of the custom class:
#interface Task : NSObject
{
NSString *name;
BOOL completeness;
int priority;
}
And I've got a dilemma. What to choose NSCoding or converting the Task into NSDictionary?
I mean which way is more efficient?
It's gonna be my first application. And at first i didn't have an idea that i have to save the data. Should i remake the model?
Thanks for any suggestions.
You can use NSDictionary or 2 NSMutableArray's for name objects and priority objects, I didn't worked on NSCoding till now, so i don't no about that.
I will suggest you to use NSMutableArray's and corresponding 2 plist files for every Array. If u use NSMutableArray, This Creating Multiple Plist files in document directory..? Link will helpful for you. All the best
Related
I have a Class for handling my data in my project, and now I need to store the data.
I'd like to use a Plist but I'm a bit unsure of how to start.
My class is pretty simple - 6 pieces of data, flat (no hierarchy).
I want my app to start with no data, so can I assume that I should create the PList programmatically once the User creates their first piece of data? (That is, don't create a .plist file in 'Supporting Files' prior to distribution?)
Then, when the app starts the next time, read the data and create an NSMUtableArray array of Class instances?
To create a property list, all you need to do is use appropriate types (i.e. those that support the property list format: NSData, NSString, NSDictionary, NSNumber, NSDate, NSArray), store them in a single container, and tell the containing object to write itself to a file. To read the data, you can initialize that same type using a path. For example:
// writing some data to a property list
NSString *somePath = ... // replace ... with the path where you want to store the plist file
NSMutableDictionary myDict = [NSMutableDictionary dictionary];
[myDict setObject:#"Caleb" forKey:#"name"];
[myDict setObject:[NSNumber numberWithInt:240] forKey:#"cholesterolOrIQ"];
[myDict writeToFile:somePath atomically:YES];
// reading the file again
NSDictionary *readDict = [NSDictionary dictionaryWithContentsOfFile:somePath];
The simplest way is to simple save an NSArray or NSDictionary to disk. Caleb's answer goes into detail there so I won't repeat it, other than to say you might have to convert a non-compatible object like NSColor to an property list object like NSData. It's up to you to do this each time you save or load your data.
NSKeyedArchiver and NSKeyedUnarchiver give you a little more control over the process, but work pretty much the same way. You provide (or get back) a plist compatible root object (usually an NSDictionary) that contains your data. I recommend creating a dictionary that includes your data structure as well as an arbitrary number (your app's build number is a good choice) to use as a version indicator. This way if you ever update your data model you can easily determine if you need to do anything to convert it to the new version.
If you're putting your own objects into the data file, look into NSCoding. The protocol gives you two methods using NSKeyedArchiver and NSKeyedUnarchiver to save and restore your data. This is by far the most straightforward approach if your data model consists of anything more than a few simple strings and numbers, since you're dealing with your own native objects. In your case, you would have your data class implement NSCoding and use the NSKeyedArchiver and NSKeyedUnarchiver methods to encode your six instance variables. When it's time to save or load, pack the instance of your class into an NSDictionary (along with a versioning number as I mentioned above) and call NSKeyedArchiver's archiveRootObject:toFile:. Your save an load methods deal only with your own data object, which makes things easy for you. The common pitfall to watch out for here is if your custom data object contains other custom object. This is fine, but you have to make sure every object that's going to be saved has its own NSCoding implementation.
Two things you can do:
Use NSUserDefaults:
http://developer.apple.com/library/mac/#documentation/Cocoa/Reference/Foundation/Classes/NSUserDefaults_Class/Reference/Reference.html
The objectForKey method is the one you want to use to store your class. But, as pointed out in the comments, this shouldn't really be used for storing lots of user data; it's best for saving preferences.
For storing more data, you might want to look at Core Data. It's more complex, but should be better suited to your needs. Here's a tutorial on it:
http://mobile.tutsplus.com/tutorials/iphone/iphone-core-data/
Neither of these seems best for your simple application, but I leave this answer up since it gives alternatives for saving data to the iPhone.
In my iphone app i am programmatically creating the labels ,,i am creating array of labels
like UILabel *lblVersionName[20]; i need to copy the contents of the label into some string so i need to define property like
#property(nonatomic,retain)UILabel *lblVersionName[20];
but its giving error that "property can not have array of function type lblVersionName[20]"
cant we have property for array of labels(lblVersionName[20])
please somebody do help me, thanx in advance
Instead of C array just use NSArray or NSMutableArray
From the documentation:
Supported Types
You can declare a property for any Objective-C class, Core Foundation data type, or “plain old data” (POD) type
So you're trying to add a property for an unsupported type.
Like Terente wrote, you should use NSArray or NSMutableArray.
You might have a reason for why you need a c array, but that is only going to cause you a lot of trouble down the road. Don't fight the frameworks.
Im making an app similar to apples weather app. My main view has a NSMutableArray of objects to be displayed. This array is managed by the user. I want to be able to save this array so that when the app is relaunched it has the stuff the user selected. The objects stored are "Event" objects which is a custom object type that stores more custom objects that all hold some of the following: NSString, NSNumber, NSUInteger, NSURL. My research has led me to three options, none of which i understand, nor know how to implement: saving to a plist using writeToFile, archiving the data, or saving it to userPrefs.
Does anybody know of a solution to my problem?
Sample data object:
`
#interface Rider : NSObject {
NSString *name;
}
-(Rider *) initWithName:(NSString *) nam;
- (NSString *)description ;
#property (nonatomic, retain) NSString *name;
`
At least two of those three options are reasonable. NSUserDefaults is really meant more for storing application preferences than as an option for storing the bulk of your data, so if you have a lot of data you should look at other possibilities first.
Property lists are easy to read and write, but you're limited to using a handful of standard types: NSString, NSData, NSArray, NSDate, and NSNumber. You can do quite a lot with those types, but since your own Event class is involved using property lists won't be so simple.
Archiving seems like the best plan. All you need to do is to adopt a simple protocol, NSCoding, in your custom classes (and make sure that the other classes that you use, like NSArray, also implement NSCoding). Then, create an instance of NSKeyedArchiver and ask it to archive your object graph. Recreating the object graph later is just as simple: create an NSUnarchiver instance with your file's data and unarchive your objects.
You can read about both archiving and property lists in the Archives and Serializations Programming Guide. Read that document before you go any farther.
There are other options as well -- you can always use the standard C file operations to write directly to a file if you want. It's unlikely that that will be as convenient as archiving, however.
Your question itself has the answer.
Create each of your object as dictionary and finally you will have array of dictionaries.
NSArray and NSDictionary has the methods to write its data to a file (plist is preferred). If you use plist files, it will be easy to read again.
When starting to use NSUserDefaults for a custom classes, with multiple levels, is this time to move to Core Data?
Background:
I did start off using NSUserDefaults for my application data, which was basic 3 levels (see below for a rough example)
I then wanted to have more readability/typing when using the structure so have started to create custom classes for the data
I'm now realizing these custom classes will need to implement initWithCoder and encodeWithCoder methods
So given the above I'm really wondering whether I'd be better off going to Core Data here. Don't you conceptually here get to define the structure in XCode then have access saving/loading the data directly into the classes XCode creates for you?
Rough examples of structure:
Items (NSMutableArray)
aString: NSString
aString2: NSString
aDate: NSDate
aDate2: NSDate
aBool: BOOL
aTI1: NSTimeInterval
aTI2: NSTimeInterval
Keywords (NSMutableArray)
keyword: NSString
keyword: NSString
Core Data or property lists or straight up object archival, yes. As soon as you have any kind of data beyond very simple key/value pairs, you need to think about your model layer.
Convenient though it is, user defaults -- as the name implies -- just isn't a place to persist user data! It is for configuration, preferences, etc...
I want to add an NSMutableArray of NSStrings to one of my Entities in my core data model. The problem is that this isn't a supported type in Core Data.
I tried making a tranformable attribute, but the problem is that I see no way of turning a NSMutableArray to NSData, and then going from NSData, back to an NSMutableArray. Does anyone have an idea as to how this issue can be solved?
(I know I can archive the array, but I don't want to do that, I want it to be present in my model).
You could have a binary data attribute in your modeled object, archive the array to data, and hand it off to the object.
But I think the better way would be to have a to-many relationship, instead of using an array directly.
****Edit: Here's how to archive the array into NSData so that it can be used in your managed object***
NSData *arrayData = [NSKeyedArchiver archivedDataWithRootObject:[NSArray arrayWithObjects:#"1",#"2", nil]];
Basically, any class you have which conforms to the NSCoding protocol can be archived in this way. NSArray/NSMutableArray already conform to it. They tell all of their objects to archive themselves, so they must conform too. And all of those objects' members must conform, etc. It's like a tree.
Since your array conforms, and it's an array of NSString (which also conforms), then you're golden.