I have an NSFetchedResultsController that basically updates a UITableView with a list of objects updated in a background NSOperation instantiated/updated off an API call from a Web service. I have implemented the various NSFetchedResultsControllerDelegate methods (e.g. controllerWillChangeContent
, controller:didChangeObject:atIndexPath:forChangeType:newIndexPath
, etc.) with code from this site: http://www.raywenderlich.com/999/core-data-tutorial-how-to-use-nsfetchedresultscontroller
The problem is a row is never inserted in the UITableView when an object matching the predicate is inserted. However, when I do delete an object that is already presented in the table view, its corresponding row disappears correctly.
The below is the code for instantiating the NSFetchedResultsController:
- (NSFetchedResultsController *)fetchedResultsController
{
if (_fetchedResultsController != nil) {
return _fetchedResultsController;
}
// is a nearby category of objects - check to see if passed in
if (self.nearbyCat == nil) return nil;
// Creates a new NSManagedObjectContext
NSManagedObjectContext *moContext = [[Utils getUtils] newManagedObjectContext];
NSFetchRequest *req = [[NSFetchRequest alloc] init];
NSEntityDescription *nearbyObjDesc = [NSEntityDescription entityForName:ENTITY_NAME_OBJECT inManagedObjectContext:moContext];
[req setEntity:nearbyObjDesc];
// predicate key path is passed into the view controller is an ivar - fetchKeyPath
NSString *predKeyPath = self.fetchKeyPath;
NSString *catName = [self.nearbyCat valueForKey:kCategoryNameKey];
NSPredicate *pred = [NSPredicate predicateWithFormat:@"(%K like %@)",
predKeyPath, catName];
[req setPredicate:pred];
[predKeyPath release];
NSSortDescriptor *sort = [[NSSortDescriptor alloc] initWithKey:kObjectScoreKey ascending:NO];
[req setSortDescriptors:[NSArray arrayWithObject:sort]];
[req setFetchBatchSize:20];
_cacheName = [[NSString alloc] initWithFormat:@"NearbyObjectsFor%@", catName];
// In case there are new objects created because of change in location,
// we delete from the cache first, keeping the cache fresh.
[NSFetchedResultsController deleteCacheWithName:_cacheName];
NSFetchedResultsController *myFetchedResultsController = [[NSFetchedResultsController alloc] initWithFetchRequest:req managedObjectContext:moContext sectionNameKeyPath:nil cacheName:_cacheName];
[moContext release];
self.fetchedResultsController = myFetchedResultsController;
_fetchedResultsController.delegate = self;
[sort release];
[req release];
[myFetchedResultsController release];
return _fetchedResultsController;
}
I use the recommended method of registering for NSManagedObjectContextDidSaveNotification and then performing the mergeChangesFromContextDidSaveNotification: on the main thread in the method mergeContextChanges below:
- (void)mergeContextChanges:(NSNotification *)note
{
if(note.object && self.fetchedResultsController)
{
SEL selector = @selector(mergeChangesFromContextDidSaveNotification:);
[[self.fetchedResultsController managedObjectContext] performSelectorOnMainThread:selector withObject:note waitUntilDone:YES];
}
}
Has anyone faced a similar problem before?