1

I have my main app delegate I have a few UIViewController derived instances driven by a Storyboard

Say I'd like to provide a centralized persistence layer for my application - perhaps Core Data of SQLite. Where would I put those objects? I'm missing some centrally accessible "Application" class you can access from all the UIViewController instances.

Is there a pattern to follow here?

3 Answers 3

2

you should check the singleton pattern:

In software engineering, the singleton pattern is a design pattern that restricts the instantiation of a class to one object. This is useful when exactly one object is needed to coordinate actions across the system. The concept is sometimes generalized to systems that operate more efficiently when only one object exists, or that restrict the instantiation to a certain number of objects. The term comes from the mathematical concept of a singleton.

here is a source for a example implementation: What should my Objective-C singleton look like?

and here is the direct link for the modern solution: https://stackoverflow.com/a/145395/644629

7
  • Exactly what I would have wrote. More modern implementations use GCD's dispatch_once function though.
    – borrrden
    Jul 24, 2012 at 15:26
  • FYI, the linked question is fairly out of date. There best answer (dispatch_once) is buried way down in the list. iosptl.com/posts/the-singleton-pattern
    – Rob Napier
    Jul 24, 2012 at 15:29
  • yes thats true, but i think he need a Singleton Model Class to store some global data.
    – CarlJ
    Jul 24, 2012 at 15:29
  • Absolutely agreed (well, about 80% of the time... :D See my answer for the other common solution).
    – Rob Napier
    Jul 24, 2012 at 15:30
  • That's the one I was referring to as buried way down on the list. I'd suggest down-voting the out-of-date answers, but that would just be mean. :) They were completely appropriate when they were written.
    – Rob Napier
    Jul 24, 2012 at 15:36
0

What you're describing is your model layer. There are two main ways to manage the model:

  • At application startup, create the main model object and hand it to the first view controller.
  • Make the main model object a Singleton.

The "main model object" in both cases is generally some kind of object manager. It could be a document, or it could be a PersonManager if you have a bunch of Person objects. This object will vend model objects from your persistence store (generally Core Data).

The advantage of a Singleton here is that it's a little easier to implement and you don't have to pass around the manager. The advantage of a non-Singleton is that it's easier to have more than one (for a document-based system), and it's easier to test and reason about non-singletons than singletons. That said, probably 80% of my projects use a singleton model manager.

As a side note, that you appear to already understand: never store the model in the application delegate, and never use the application delegate as a "rendezvous point" to get to the model. That is, never have a sharedModel method on the application delegate. If you find yourself calling [[UIApplication sharedApplication] delegate] anywhere in your code, you're almost always doing something wrong. Hanging data on the application delegate makes code reuse extremely difficult.

0

Go with a singleton pattern, which has scope of application lifetime.

@interface DataManager ()

@end

#pragma mark -

@implementation DataManager

#pragma mark - Shared Instance

static DataManager* sharedInstance = nil;

#pragma mark - Singleton Methods

- (id)init
{
  self = [super init];

  if (self) {
    // Initialization code here.
  }

  return self;
}

+ (DataManager*)sharedInstance
{
    @synchronized([DataManager class])
    {
        if (!sharedInstance) {

      //[[self alloc] init];
      sharedInstance = [[DataManager alloc] init];

    }
        return sharedInstance;
    }

    return nil;
}

+ (id)alloc
{
    @synchronized([DataManager class])
    {
        NSAssert(sharedInstance == nil, @"Attempted to allocate a second instance \
             of a singleton.");

    sharedInstance = [super alloc];

    return sharedInstance;
    }

    return nil;
}


@end

Declare your properties in .h file and synthesize them here in .m file.

To use that property just call:

// set value
[[DataManager sharedInstance] setSharedProperty:@"ABC"]; // If its a string

// get Value
NSLog(@"value :  %@", [[DataManager sharedInstance] sharedProperty]);

Hope this is what you required.

Enjoy Coding :)

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