I\'m using Core Data for a table view, and I\'d like to use the first letter of each of my results as the section header (so I can get the section index on the side). Is the
See my answer to a similar question here, in which I describe how to create localized sectionKey indexes that are persisted (because you cannot sort on transient attributes in an NSFetchedResultsController).
I solved this using the UILocalizedIndexCollation as mentioned in the NSFetchedResultsController v.s. UILocalizedIndexedCollation question
The elegant way is to do make the "firstLetter" a transient property, HOWEVER in practice that is slow.
It is slow because for a transient property to be calculated, the entire object needs to be faulted into memory. If you have a lot of records, it will be very, very slow.
The fast, but inelegant way, is to create a non-transient "firstLetter" property which you update each time you set your "name" property. Several ways to do this: override the "setName:" assessor, override "willSave", KVO.
There may be a more elegant way to do this, but I recently had the same problem and came up with this solution.
First, I defined a transient property on the objects I was indexing called firstLetterOfName, and wrote the getter into the .m file for the object. e.x.
- (NSString *)uppercaseFirstLetterOfName {
[self willAccessValueForKey:@"uppercaseFirstLetterOfName"];
NSString *stringToReturn = [[self.name uppercaseString] substringToIndex:1];
[self didAccessValueForKey:@"uppercaseFirstLetterOfName"];
return stringToReturn;
}
Next, I set up my fetch request/entities to use this property.
NSFetchRequest *request = [[NSFetchRequest alloc] init];
NSEntityDescription *entity = [NSEntityDescription entityForName:@"Object" inManagedObjectContext:dataContext];
[request setEntity:entity];
[NSSortDescriptor *sortDescriptor = [[NSSortDescriptor alloc] initWithKey:@"name" ascending:YES selector:@selector(caseInsensitiveCompare:)];
NSArray *sortDescriptors = [NSArray arrayWithObject:sortDescriptor];
[request setSortDescriptors:sortDescriptors];
Side note, apropos of nothing: Be careful with NSFetchedResultsController — it's not exactly fully baked yet IMHO, and any situation beyond the simple cases listed in the documentation, you will probably be better off doing it the 'old fashioned' way.
You should just pass "name" as the sectionNameKeyPath. See this answer to the question "Core Data backed UITableView with indexing".
UPDATE
That solution only works if you only care about having the fast index title scroller. In that case, you would NOT display the section headers. See below for sample code.
Otherwise, I agree with refulgentis that a transient property is the best solution. Also, when creating the NSFetchedResultsController, the sectionNameKeyPath has this limitation:
If this key path is not the same as that specified by the first sort descriptor in fetchRequest, they must generate the same relative orderings. For example, the first sort descriptor in fetchRequest might specify the key for a persistent property; sectionNameKeyPath might specify a key for a transient property derived from the persistent property.
Boilerplate UITableViewDataSource implementations using NSFetchedResultsController:
- (NSInteger)numberOfSectionsInTableView:(UITableView *)tableView {
return [[fetchedResultsController sections] count];
}
- (NSArray *)sectionIndexTitlesForTableView:(UITableView *)tableView {
return [fetchedResultsController sectionIndexTitles];
}
- (NSInteger)tableView:(UITableView *)tableView sectionForSectionIndexTitle:(NSString *)title atIndex:(NSInteger)index {
return [fetchedResultsController sectionForSectionIndexTitle:title atIndex:index];
}
- (NSInteger)tableView:(UITableView *)tableView numberOfRowsInSection:(NSInteger)section {
id <NSFetchedResultsSectionInfo> sectionInfo = [[fetchedResultsController sections] objectAtIndex:section];
return [sectionInfo numberOfObjects];
}
// Don't implement this since each "name" is its own section:
//- (NSString *)tableView:(UITableView *)tableView titleForHeaderInSection:(NSInteger)section {
// id <NSFetchedResultsSectionInfo> sectionInfo = [[fetchedResultsController sections] objectAtIndex:section];
// return [sectionInfo name];
//}
UPDATE 2
For the new 'uppercaseFirstLetterOfName' transient property, add a new string attribute to the applicable entity in the model and check the "transient" box.
There are a few ways to implement the getter. If you are generating/creating subclasses, then you can add it in the subclass's implementation (.m) file.
Otherwise, you can create a category on NSManagedObject (I put this right at the top of my view controller's implementation file, but you can split it between a proper header and implementation file of its own):
@interface NSManagedObject (FirstLetter)
- (NSString *)uppercaseFirstLetterOfName;
@end
@implementation NSManagedObject (FirstLetter)
- (NSString *)uppercaseFirstLetterOfName {
[self willAccessValueForKey:@"uppercaseFirstLetterOfName"];
NSString *aString = [[self valueForKey:@"name"] uppercaseString];
// support UTF-16:
NSString *stringToReturn = [aString substringWithRange:[aString rangeOfComposedCharacterSequenceAtIndex:0]];
// OR no UTF-16 support:
//NSString *stringToReturn = [aString substringToIndex:1];
[self didAccessValueForKey:@"uppercaseFirstLetterOfName"];
return stringToReturn;
}
@end
Also, in this version, don't forget to pass 'uppercaseFirstLetterOfName' as the sectionNameKeyPath:
NSFetchedResultsController *aFetchedResultsController = [[NSFetchedResultsController alloc] initWithFetchRequest:fetchRequest managedObjectContext:managedObjectContext
sectionNameKeyPath:@"uppercaseFirstLetterOfName" // this key defines the sections
cacheName:@"Root"];
And, to uncomment tableView:titleForHeaderInSection:
in the UITableViewDataSource implementation:
- (NSString *)tableView:(UITableView *)tableView titleForHeaderInSection:(NSInteger)section {
id <NSFetchedResultsSectionInfo> sectionInfo = [[fetchedResultsController sections] objectAtIndex:section];
return [sectionInfo name];
}
Here is the simple solution for obj-c, several years and one language late . It works and works quickly in a project of mine.
First I created a category on NSString, naming the file NSString+Indexing. I wrote a method that returns the first letter of a string
@implementation NSString (Indexing)
- (NSString *)stringGroupByFirstInitial {
if (!self.length || self.length == 1)
return self;
return [self substringToIndex:1];
}
Then I used that method in the definition of the fetched result controller as follows
_fetchedResultsController = [[NSFetchedResultsController alloc] initWithFetchRequest:fetchRequest managedObjectContext:self.managedObjectContext sectionNameKeyPath:@"name.stringGroupByFirstInitial"
cacheName:nil];
The above code in conjunction with the two stringIndex methods will work with no need for messing about with transient properties or storing a separate attribute that just holds the first letter in core data
However when I try to do the same with Swift it throws an exception as it doesn't like having a function as part key path (or a calculated string property - I tried that too) If anyone out there knows how to achieve the same thing in Swift I would dearly like to know how.