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I was creating a data structure manually using the following:

NSDictionary* league1 = [[NSDictionary alloc] initWithObjectsAndKeys: @"Barclays Premier League", @"name",
    			 @"Premier League", @"shortname",
    			 @"101", @"id", nil];
NSDictionary* league2 = [[NSDictionary alloc] initWithObjectsAndKeys: @"Coca-Cola Championship", @"name",
    			 @"Championship", @"shortname",
    			 @"102", @"id", nil];
NSDictionary* league3 = [[NSDictionary alloc] initWithObjectsAndKeys: @"Scottish Premier League", @"name",
    			 @"SPL", @"shortname",
    			 @"201", @"id", nil];
NSDictionary* league4 = [[NSDictionary alloc] initWithObjectsAndKeys: @"Champions League", @"name",
    			 @"UCL", @"shortname",
    			 @"501", @"id", nil];

contentArray = [[NSArray alloc] initWithObjects:

    			[[NSDictionary alloc] initWithObjectsAndKeys: @"English", @"category", [[NSArray alloc] initWithObjects: league1, league2, nil], @"leagues", nil],
    			[[NSDictionary alloc] initWithObjectsAndKeys: @"Scottish", @"category", [[NSArray alloc] initWithObjects: league3, nil], @"leagues", nil],
    			[[NSDictionary alloc] initWithObjectsAndKeys: @"Tournaments", @"category", [[NSArray alloc] initWithObjects: league4, nil], @"leagues", nil],
    			nil];

[league1 release];
[league2 release];
[league3 release];
[league4 release];

However, I thought this would be better if it was read from a file. So I created the file leagues.plist which has the following structure:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE plist PUBLIC "-//Apple//DTD PLIST 1.0//EN" "http://www.apple.com/DTDs/PropertyList-1.0.dtd">
<plist version="1.0">
    <array>
    	<dict>
    		<key>category</key>
    		<string>English</string>
    		<key>leagues</key>
    		<array>
    			<dict>
    				<key>name</key>
    				<string>Barclays Premier League</string>
    				<key>shortname</key>
    				<string>Premier League</string>
    				<key>id</key>
    				<string>101</string>
    			</dict>
    			<dict>
    				<key>name</key>
    				<string>Coca-Cola Championship</string>
    				<key>shortname</key>
    				<string>Championship</string>
    				<key>id</key>
    				<string>102</string>
    			</dict>
    		</array>
    	</dict>
    	<dict>
    		<key>category</key>
    		<string>Scottish</string>
    		<key>leagues</key>
    		<array>
    			<dict>
    				<key>name</key>
    				<string>Scottish Premier League</string>
    				<key>shortname</key>
    				<string>SPL</string>
    				<key>id</key>
    				<string>201</string>
    			</dict>
    		</array>
    	</dict>
    	<dict>
    		<key>category</key>
    		<string>Tournaments</string>
    		<key>leagues</key>
    		<array>
    			<dict>
    				<key>name</key>
    				<string>Champions League</string>
    				<key>shortname</key>
    				<string>UCL</string>
    				<key>id</key>
    				<string>501</string>
    			</dict>
    		</array>
    	</dict>
    </array>
</plist>

How do I read this file in. I have tried various methods but nothing has worked. I don't even know if I am looking in the right place for the file. For reference I am trying the following methods:

NSString* errorDesc = nil;
NSPropertyListFormat format;
NSString* plistPath = [[NSBundle mainBundle] pathForResource:@"league" ofType:@"plist"];
NSData* plistXML = [[NSFileManager defaultManager] contentsAtPath:plistPath];
contentArray = (NSArray*)[NSPropertyListSerialization
    								 propertyListFromData:plistXML
    								 mutabilityOption:NSPropertyListMutableContainersAndLeaves
    								 format:&format
    								 errorDescription:&errorDesc];

if (!contentArray) {
    NSLog(errorDesc);
    [errorDesc release];
}

or

NSString* plistPath = [[NSBundle mainBundle] pathForResource:@"league" ofType:@"plist"];
contentArray = [NSArray arrayWithContentsOfFile:plistPath];

or

NSArray *paths = NSSearchPathForDirectoriesInDomains(NSDocumentDirectory,NSUserDomainMask, YES);
NSString *documentsPath = [paths objectAtIndex:0];

NSString *fooPath = [documentsPath stringByAppendingPathComponent:@"leagues.plist"];
NSLog(fooPath);
contentArray = [NSArray arrayWithContentsOfFile:fooPath];
NSLog(@"%@",contentArray);

This is finally driving me completely insane. Help please!

Thank you kindly

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5 Answers

up vote 41 down vote accepted
NSString* plistPath = [[NSBundle mainBundle] pathForResource:@"league" ofType:@"plist"];
contentArray = [NSArray arrayWithContentsOfFile:plistPath];

That answer is correct - are you sure that your file is in the app? Did you add it to your project, and check to see if it gets copied into your app bundle? If not, it might be the file was not added to the target you are building, an easy mistake to make especially if you have multiple targets.

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Just learning here :). I don't know if it is in the main bundle. Thanks I will check that next. – Xetius Apr 15 '09 at 6:47
It helps me. Thank You. – Mahmud Ahsan Jan 17 '11 at 12:58
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Kendall is correct.

In my experience, you need to add your file to the "Resources" folder in xcode.

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What about a folder inside the Resources folder? Can it also be added there? – Patricia Oct 28 '10 at 20:41
feedback

For completeness, Kendall and bentford are completely correct. However, in my sample, contentArray was a property and by the end of the method it was going out of scope because arrayWithContentsOfFile creates an auto-released object.

To make this work correctly I needed to do 3 things:

  1. put the file in the resources folder

  2. name the file correctly (was leagues.plist instead of league.plist)

  3. read the file using [[NSArray alloc] initWithContentsOfFile:plistPath);

the third part creates an allocated NSArray that does not release when you exit the scope of this function... of course, this needed to be released in the dealloc function.

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for the autorelease thing.. you can just "retain" where appropriate. – dwery Jul 23 '10 at 5:42
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Just to add. I had the same problem and the suggested solution helped me solve the problem, however I am not sure if I actually used the exact solution. In my case the problem was that the .plist file was added to a different target (had added a new target a moment before). Therefore the solution was .plist > Get Info > Targets, and make sure it is added to the correct target so it gets copied to device when installing. Darn had I figure that out soon enough I would have saved a lot of time. Hope this is helpful too. Regards!

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Use this code if the plist is in the resources folder of the project.

  NSString *sourcePath = [[NSBundle mainBundle] pathForResource:@"league"    ofType:@"plist"];
 contentArray = [NSArray arrayWithContentsOfFile:sourcePath];

If the plist is inside the document directory of the app use this:

    NSArray *paths = 
NSSearchPathForDirectoriesInDomains(NSDocumentDirectory, NSUserDomainMask, YES);
NSString *basePath = ([paths count] > 0) ? [paths objectAtIndex:0] : nil;

NSString *plistName = @"league";
NSString *finalPath = [basePath stringByAppendingPathComponent: 
                       [NSString stringWithFormat: @"%@.plist", plistName]];



contentArray = [NSArray arrayWithContentsOfFile:finalPath];
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