I am performing a fetch request, using an NSPredicate to eliminate some objects from the initial selection, and using an NSExpression to then retrieve only the maximum value of a date attribute of the managed objects. I am using exactly the same code as Apple gives in its example (Apple Developer), however, it seems that this expression is somehow considering the attribute for which I want the maximum as an array, so every time I perform the fetch, the app crashes with an 'unrecognised selector' exception (trying to send the count message to an __NSDate instance). If I change the attribute name to a string attribute, then I get the same exception for an __NSCFString instance or equivalent), which implies to me that it is finding objects and using the right attribute, but somehow the expression is not being applied correctly.
My code is:
NSFetchRequest *request = [[NSFetchRequest alloc] init];
NSEntityDescription *entity = [NSEntityDescription entityForName:@"BridgeOpening" inManagedObjectContext:managedObjectContext];
[request setEntity:entity];
request.predicate = [NSPredicate predicateWithFormat:@"lastUpdated != nil && bridge.location == %@", location];
// Specify that the request should return dictionaries.
[request setResultType:NSDictionaryResultType];
// Create an expression for the key path.
NSExpression *keyPathExpression = [NSExpression expressionForKeyPath:@"lastUpdated"];
// Create an expression to represent the maximum value at the key path 'creationDate'
NSExpression *maxExpression = [NSExpression expressionForFunction:@"max:" arguments:[NSArray arrayWithObject:keyPathExpression]];
// Create an expression description using the maxExpression and returning a date.
NSExpressionDescription *expressionDescription = [[NSExpressionDescription alloc] init];
// The name is the key that will be used in the dictionary for the return value.
[expressionDescription setName:@"maxDate"];
[expressionDescription setExpression:maxExpression];
[expressionDescription setExpressionResultType:NSDateAttributeType];
// Set the request's properties to fetch just the property represented by the expressions.
[request setPropertiesToFetch:[NSArray arrayWithObject:expressionDescription]];
// Execute the fetch.
NSError *error = nil;
NSLog(@"executing fetch");
NSArray *objects = [managedObjectContext executeFetchRequest:request error:&error];
NSLog(@"fetch finished");
if (objects == nil) {
// Handle the error.
}
else {
if ([objects count] > 0) {
NSLog(@"Minimum date: %@", [[objects objectAtIndex:0] valueForKey:@"maxDate"]);
lastUpdate = [[objects objectAtIndex:0] valueForKey:@"maxDate"];
}
}
The 'fetch finished' log is never reached, so the exception is definitely cause by executing the fetch request.
Does anyone have any idea as to why whatever the expression is doing seems to expect an NSArray, or know what I am doing wrong? I should add that if I do the fetch request without the expression (and NSManagedObjectResultType) there is no problem, and if my predicate is such that there are no results before the expression is applied then there are no problems.
I think this is probably the same problem as encountered in this post, but there is no accepted solution and the answer the original poster gave is not acceptable (using NSManagedObjectResultType instead of NSDictionaryResultType, which I think just bypasses the expression altogether, and almost certainly negates the memory advantage of using an expression.
EDIT: I forgot to state this originally, but I have the same problem whether or not I use a predicate with the fetch request.
request.predicate
?