I have an entity in my core data model like this:
@interface Selection : NSManagedObject
@property (nonatomic, retain) NSString * book_id;
@property (nonatomic,
What Mike Weller wrote is right. I'll expand the answer a little bit.
First you need to create a NSFetchRequest
like the following:
NSFetchRequest *fetchRequest = [[NSFetchRequest alloc] init];
[fetchRequest setEntity:[NSEntityDescription entityForName:@"Selection" inManagedObjectContext:context]];
Then you have to set the predicate for that request like the following:
[fetchRequest setPredicate:[NSPredicate predicateWithFormat:@"content == %@ AND page_id == %@ AND book_id == %@", contentVal, pageVal, bookVal]];
where
NSString* contentVal = @"test";
NSNumber* pageVal = [NSNumber numberWithInt:5];
NSString* bookVal = @"1331313";
I'm using %@
since I'm supposing you are using objects and not scalar values.
Now you perform a fetch in the context with the previous request:
NSError* error = nil;
NSArray* results = [context executeFetchRequest:fetchRequest error:&error];
results
contains all the managed objects that match that predicate.
Finally you could grab the objects and call a deletion on them.
[context deleteObject:currentObj];
Once done you need to save the context as per the documentation.
Just as a new object is not saved to the store until the context is saved, a deleted object is not removed from the store until the context is saved.
Hence
NSError* error = nil;
[context save:&error];
Note that save
method returns a bool value. So you can use an approach like the following or display an alert to the user. Source NSManagedObjectContext save error.
NSError *error = nil;
if ([context save:&error] == NO) {
NSAssert(NO, @"Save should not fail\n%@", [error localizedDescription]);
abort();
}