This is a lightweight ActiveRecord way of managing Core Data objects.
The syntax is borrowed from Ruby on Rails.
And yeah, no AppDelegate code.
It's fully tested with Kiwi.
- Install with CocoaPods or clone
- #import "ObjectiveRecord.h"in your model or .pch file.
Person *john = [Person create];
john.name = @"John";
[john save];
[john delete];
[Person create:@{ @"name" : @"John", @"age" : @12, @"member" : @NO }];// all Person entities from the database
NSArray *people = [Person all];
// Person entities with name John
NSArray *johns = [Person where:@"name == 'John'"];
// And of course, John Doe!
Person *johnDoe = [Person where:@"name == 'John' AND surname == 'Doe'"].first;
// Members over 18 from NY
NSArray *people = [Person where:@{ 
                      @"age" : @18,
                      @"member" : @YES,
                      @"state" : @"NY"
                  }];
// I wanna be fancy and write my own NSPredicate
NSPredicate *membersPredicate = [NSPredicate  predicateWithBlock:^BOOL(Person *person, NSDictionary *bindings) {
    return person.isMember == YES;
}];
NSArray *members = [Person where:membersPredicate];NSManagedObjectContext *newContext = [[NSManagedObjectContext alloc] initWithConcurrencyType:NSPrivateQueueConcurrencyType];
newContext.persistentStoreCoordinator = [[CoreDataManager instance] persistentStoreCoordinator];
Person *john = [Person createInContext:newContext];
Person *john = [Person where:@"name == 'John'" inContext:newContext].first;
NSArray *people = [Person allInContext:newContext];If you've added the Core Data manually, you can change the custom model and database name on CoreDataManager
[CoreDataManager instance].modelName = @"MyModelName";
[CoreDataManager instance].databaseName = @"custom_database_name";// find
[[Person all] each:^(Person *person) {
    person.member = @NO;
}];
for(Person *person in [Person all]) {
    person.member = @YES;
}
// create / save
Person *john = [Person create];
john.name = @"John";
john.surname = @"Wayne";
[john save];
// find / delete
[[Person where: @{ "member" : @NO }] each:^(Person *person) {
    [person delete];
}];The most of the time, your JSON web service returns keys like first_name, last_name, etc. 
Your ObjC implementation has camelCased properties - firstName, lastName.
Since v1.2, camel case is supported automatically - you don't have to do nothing! Otherwise, if you have more complex mapping, here's how you do it:
// just override - mappings in your NSManagedObject subclass
// this method is called just once, so you don't have to do any caching / singletons
@implementation Person
- (NSDictionary *)mappings {
  return @{ 
      @"id": @"remoteID",
      @"mmbr": @"isMember",
      // you can also map relationships, and initialize your graph from a single line
      @"employees": @{
          @"class": [Person class]
      },
      @"cars": @{
          @"key": "vehicles",
          @"class": [Vehicle class]
      }
  };
  // first_name => firstName is automatically handled
}
@endObjectiveRecord supports CoreData's in-memory store. In any place, before your tests start running, it's enough to call
[[CoreDataManager sharedManager] useInMemoryStore];- NSIncrementalStore support
