If you only store standard objects inside the dictionary like NSData, NSString, NSNumber, NSDate, NSArray, NSDictionary or a combination of them you don't have to do anything special.
However, if you have instances of custom objects in it (i.e. classes that you've created) you first need to convert it into a compatible type (e.g. NSData
). You can do this using the code below:
NSData* data=[NSKeyedArchiver archivedDataWithRootObject:json];
[NSUserDefaults standardUserDefaults] setObject:data forKey:@"user"]
For this method to work, you ned to implement these 2 methods in the custom classes you are trying to save:
- (id)initWithCoder:(NSCoder*)coder
- (void)encodeWithCoder:(NSCoder*)coder;
To get the dictionary back from NSUserDefaults (decode) you can use:
NSData* data = [[NSUserDefaults standardUserDefaults] objectForKey:@"user"];
NSDictionary* json = [NSKeyedUnarchiver unarchiveObjectWithData:data];
EDIT
To check if your json
object contains any [NSNull null]
values, add this piece of code before you are making your insert into NSUserDefaults
for (id val in [json allValues])
{
if ([val isKindOfClass:[NSNull class]])
{
NSLog(@"This bad! NSNull should not be in the dictionary");
break;
}
}
If you get any This is bad...
messages in the console, then you have 2 choices.
1. Use the archiving/unarchiving method I described above
2. Replace the NSNull
objects from the dictionary with other values (e.g. empty strings) if this does not break your code.
NSDictionary
as user defaults. the user default is not for storing huge amount data, for this there is theDocuments
folder.