Skip to content

A lightweight Active Record - style of managing CoreData objects.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

xavierjurado/ObjectiveRecord

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Intro

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.

Build Status

Usage

  1. Install with CocoaPods or clone
  2. #import "ObjectiveRecord.h" in your model or .pch file.

Create / Save / Delete

Person *john = [Person create];
john.name = @"John";
[john save];
[john delete];

[Person create:@{ @"name" : @"John", @"age" : @12, @"member" : @NO }];

Finders

// 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];

Custom ManagedObjectContext

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];

Custom CoreData model or .sqlite database

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";

Examples

// 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];
}];

Mapping

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
}

@end

Testing

ObjectiveRecord supports CoreData's in-memory store. In any place, before your tests start running, it's enough to call

[[CoreDataManager sharedManager] useInMemoryStore];

Roadmap

  • NSIncrementalStore support

About

A lightweight Active Record - style of managing CoreData objects.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Objective-C 97.7%
  • Ruby 2.3%