I have a series of nested objects that I am needing to put through the NSCoding protocol so that I can save the top level object into NSUserDefaults.
Here is the st
NSCoding
isn't magic so it will work 'recursively' if your implementation of the encoding and decoding methods tells it to be.
Implement the NSCoding
methods and pass the data to be encoded to the encoder. Implement the NSCoding
methods in all of your custom classes so that when you encode the array all of the contents can be processed appropriately.
Be sure to call super
if the classes superclass also implements NSCoding
.
e.g.
- (void)encodeWithCoder:(NSCoder *)encoder {
[encoder encodeObject:self.arrayOfClasses forKey:@"arrayOfClasses"];
}
- (id)initWithCoder:(NSCoder *)decoder {
self.arrayOfClasses = [decoder decodeObjectForKey:@"arrayOfClasses"];
}
Yes, you can (and probably should) write your support for NSCoding to be recursive. That's how NSCoding is supposed to work.
When your implement encodeWithCoder, simply call
[coder encodeObject: aProperty forKey: @"propertyName"];
on all your object's properties, including it's container properties.
Then make sure every object in your object's object graph also conforms to NSCoding.
For scalar properties, you can save the scalar value using NSCoder methods like encodeInt:forKey:
To save an object that conforms to NSCoding to user defaults, first convert it to NSData using the NSKeyedArchiver class method archivedDataWithRootObject, then save the resulting data into defaults. Quite simple, really.