What would cause an error to come back null, this is what I have

    + (BOOL)saveContext:(NSManagedObjectContext *)context
    {
      NSError *error = nil;
      if (![context save:&error]) 
      {
        DLog(@"ERROR %@, %@", error, [error userInfo]);
        UIAlertView *alert = [[UIAlertView alloc] initWithTitle:@"Sorry"

                                                        message:@"Error Saving the Data" 
                                                       delegate:nil 
                                              cancelButtonTitle:@"OK"
                                              otherButtonTitles:nil];

        [alert show];
        [alert release];

        return NO;
      }
    return YES;
    }

The above method is a class method, I am not sure why the error does not have any information.

This method is called like this

[HSCoreDataUtility saveContext:self.managedObjectContext];

when a modalViewController is closing and returning to the NavigationController, so I need the context to be saved, but it throughs an error, now I think I have an idea as to the cause of it not being saved, but shouldn't the error give me a clue? but the log just says "ERROR (null), (null)"

any thoughts

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Are you sure context is non-nil? – James Huddleston Nov 9 '10 at 19:18
yes, i am sure. – creativeKoder Nov 9 '10 at 21:52
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4 Answers

up vote 1 down vote accepted

Only way I can see that situation happening is if you are passing in a nil context. I would put a logic bomb at the top of that class method to guard against that.

Well, actually, I wouldn't create a class method for this small amount of code; but the point still stands. Check for a nil context.

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the context is not nil, i know this for sure – creativeKoder Nov 9 '10 at 21:53
i am how ever passing the context around, it starts in the app delegate and I pass it around from there, could that have anything to do with it. – creativeKoder Nov 9 '10 at 21:56
It may be getting released somewhere, or not retained? Have it spit out the current [context retainCount] with a nil check. It never hurts to check. – Stephen Furlani Nov 10 '10 at 13:54
never use retainCount, ever. Do an NSAssert check against nil at the top of the method. – Marcus S. Zarra Nov 10 '10 at 15:29
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Uhm, I'm not sure %@ will cause the error to go verbose. [error localizedDescription] ?

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i have used both, [error userInfo] and [error localizedDescription], same thing error (null), (null) – creativeKoder Nov 9 '10 at 21:51
also that is what is in apple's sample code – creativeKoder Nov 9 '10 at 21:52
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I lived your pain and end up surviving. ;)

After long debugging time I realized in custom object validation method, in some cases I was returning NO and not initializing an error.

If you have this problem check validation object methods. That probably was your problem as well.

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I happened to meet this problem, and after long time debug I found it's because of a duplicate declaration of the NSError* error, may you had another NSError* error in the outer scope, like:

NSError* error = nil;

some code if (!error) { NSError* error = nil; your code }

then the error will be nil although in fact there is a exception.

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