I'm making a sectioned table with fetched results, but am having a hard time getting custom sections worked out.

Normally one would just have an attribute to sort by, and use sectionNameKeyPath: to generate the sections. But my sorting attribute is calculated on the fly, and I can't seem to get the fetchedResultsController to use it correctly...

Update: Using jbrennan's advice below, I'm really close to the intended functionality. I've added a Category to NSDate that returns a "days ago" number; putting that in here gives me sections based on those numbers:

NSFetchedResultsController *aFetchedResultsController =
    [[NSFetchedResultsController alloc] initWithFetchRequest:fetchRequest
    managedObjectContext:managedObjectContext
    sectionNameKeyPath:@"myDateAttribute.daysAgo"
    cacheName:@"Root"];

Here's where I'm stuck: I don't need them sorted by "days ago," I need them sorted via some calculations based on other attributes in the entity. So I can't just call that custom Category method, I need to call a method with arguments, like so:

[myDateAttribute sortingRoutine:thisObject.value]

Or something like that. I hope that makes some degree of sense. Thanks a ton if you can help :)

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3 Answers

up vote 4 down vote accepted

You can try the following.

Add a transient attribute to your core data model in the Task entity. Then implement the

- (void)awakeFromFetch

method in your Task NSManagedObject class. See its documentation. Within the method you are allowed to set a value for the transient property using the values of the other properties. Note that there are some restrictions on what you can do, but this is well explained in the documentation (most notably you can not modify relationships or pass arguments; however, if you can compute you transient property using only the values of the other properties/relationships it should be perfectly fine).

Once you have done this, you simply use the transient property as the attribute you pass to get back the sections.

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Aha! This worked beautifully, thanks. Now the app crashes when saving new Tasks, but I'll work on that for a bit and post a separate question if I have to. :) – Triz Sep 7 '09 at 4:23
Your app should not crash when saving: transient properties are not stored, therefore this can not be the cause in any way. – Massimo Cafaro Sep 7 '09 at 6:00
It actually isn't crashing during the save process, but after it, when the view switches back to the sectioned table. Wasn't doing this before these changes, and I haven't done anything else, so I think it's related. Perhaps awakeFromFetch: isn't being called when the view reappears? – Triz Sep 7 '09 at 18:40
awakeFromFetch: is called once, just before fetching the objects. When you switch back to the table, the NSFetchedResultsController delegate methods are called if you implemented them. – Massimo Cafaro Sep 7 '09 at 22:10
So do I need to put the same stuff I put into awakeFromFetch: into one of those methods, too? Any idea which would be the most appropriate? (An aside: How do you find these things out? ie., how did you know when awakeFromFetch: is called? I can't seem to find any of that kind of information in the reference docs...) – Triz Sep 8 '09 at 3:00
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I did something similar to this in a (soon to be) shipping iPhone app. My sections were divided up by dates like this: Yesterday, Today, Tomorrow, In The Future...

Anyway, the trick for me was adding a Category to NSDate to determine in which section my fetched object belonged.

My managed object had a property called dueDate, which was an NSDate. When configuring the fetched results controller, I used @"dueDate.relativeDate" as the section key path.

In the Category, -relativeDate was declared as returning an NSString and also as a readonly property (either of which might be sufficient, I didn't try without having both, but it doesn't hurt having both a method and property declaration). Then I simply implemented the method at it worked beautifully.

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Okay, I think I'm with you there. What if my NSDates are actually in a separate entity, though? I've got Tasks as the main entities getting fetched, and Resets are related (-to-many). So each Task has a bunch of Reset dates, with the most recent being the important one here. What I tried was using @"reset.specialDateMethod as the sort key, but it doesn't like that... – Triz Sep 5 '09 at 23:27
It depends on what your specialDateMethod does. In that method, you could probably filter through your set of Resets with an NSPredicate to find the important one, and then use its date how you please. You might also want to cache the Reset because I imagine that would get expensive. Perhaps your Task could have a property like "mostRecentReset" or whatever is relevant. – jbrennan Sep 5 '09 at 23:45
More to the point: What is sectionNameKeyPath: expecting? Does it have to be a string, which corresponds to an attribute in the entity? I think this is where I'm confused. – Triz Sep 5 '09 at 23:54
Update: I think I'm close. But: I can only put a method that takes no arguments in sectionNameKeyPath:. So using @"myAttribute.myMethod" works fine, but I need to pass the method information about the object in question -- I need to be able to do something like @"[myAttribute myMethod:var otherArg:otherVar]" But it chokes on that. – Triz Sep 6 '09 at 0:42
Wow, this is an excellent solution. I needed a transient property on NSDate kind of the same way as you, but could not quite figure out the transient properties. Putting a category on NSDate did the trick and is cleaner, keeping my model small. Thanks. – Jaanus Feb 6 '10 at 4:59
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Here is a bunch of code to achieve this (thanks jbrennan):

@implementation NSDate (MyExtensions)


// Return today.
+ (NSDate *)today {

    return [NSDate date];
}


// Return yesterday (today minus 24 hours).
+ (NSDate *)yesterday {

    return [NSDate dateWithTimeIntervalSinceNow:-60*60*24];
}


// Return tomorrow (today plus 24 hours).
+ (NSDate *)tomorrow {

    return [NSDate dateWithTimeIntervalSinceNow:60*60*24];
}


// Convert a date comporting a time into a rounded date (just the day, no time).
- (NSDate *)dayDate {

    unsigned unitFlags = NSYearCalendarUnit | NSMonthCalendarUnit |  NSDayCalendarUnit;
    NSDateComponents *comps = [[NSCalendar currentCalendar] components:unitFlags fromDate:self];
    return [[NSCalendar currentCalendar] dateFromComponents:comps]; 
}


// Return a string representing the date relatively (today, tomorrow, yesterday, etc.)
// If no relative sentence is found, return the NSDateFormatterLongStyle formatted date.
- (NSString *)relativeDate {

    if ([self.dayDate isEqualToDate:[[NSDate today] dayDate]]) {

        return NSLocalizedString(@"Today", @"NSDate extensions");
    }
    if ([self.dayDate isEqualToDate:[[NSDate yesterday] dayDate]]) {

        return NSLocalizedString(@"Yesterday", @"NSDate extensions");
    }
    if ([self.dayDate isEqualToDate:[[NSDate tomorrow] dayDate]]) {

        return NSLocalizedString(@"Tomorrow", @"NSDate extensions");
    }

    return [NSDateFormatter localizedStringFromDate:self
                                          dateStyle:NSDateFormatterLongStyle
                                          timeStyle:NSDateFormatterNoStyle];    
}


@end
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