I have a Parent <-->>
Child relationship (to-many).
And the relationship is when i need to fetch all child(s), Parent.children = (NSSet *) child(s)
There are times when I just need only one, latest entity based on a timeStamp attribute of the Child entity.
I was wandering what would be the easiest way to fetch it, easier than say creating a fetch request and setting fetch limit One and using a sort descriptor to order it based on timeStamp.
Is there an easier way? just calling maybe :
[Parent.children firstObject];
The reason is I'm gonna need to fetch it many times, through out the life of the app. In some cases, i though i'd have to fetch the latest Child entity in the -(void)awakeFromFetch() of a Parent Entity
.. and thats why i wanted to have a way thats more easier than anything else specially in terms of memory.
When Fetching Child entities, i kinda fetch a bunch of them that are child to 2 or more Parent entities using this predicate :
NSPredicate *pred = [NSPredicate predicateWithFormat:@"forParent IN %@", [Array of Parents]];
From the resultant NSSet, since i'd get all the required Child entities for the said object, it would be very convenient if I could allot a pointer to a latest child in according to its timeStamp attribute (NSDate).
Obviously after I'd get the NSSet result i could iterate over each child and allot a pointer to the latest entity i find in the NSSet, but it looks pretty painstaking, though i'd have to allot just one pointer to the latest entity of a particular Parent , iterating an NSSet which potentially could have more than a hundred entities seems bad programming
.
Any ideas?
max:
function. Other solution is to create in model on parent entity a latestChild property and set it when creating every new child. It's not ideal, but works and it's fastest solution.