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I'm trying to implement a backup of my application's data and user preferences (stored in NSUserDefaults) as email attachments with option to restore them at a later date.

I've got the process working fine for my application data file simply by attaching the contents of the file to the email, but can't work out how to do the equivalent for the user preferences. The Root.plist in the Settings bundle contains only the template for the settings interface and none of the current settings.

Reading the settings into my own plist and saving that to the documents directory is an option but seems inelegant and overly complicated. Is there a better way?

3 Answers 3

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I wouldn't go looking for the plist that stores NSUserDefaults, because it's not directly exposed by the API, and hence is an implementation detail that could be changed at any time.

Instead,

[[NSUserDefaults standardUserDefaults] dictionaryRepresentation]

will give you an NSDictionary containing all the key-value pairs that your app has stored.

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  • Thanks! That's exactly the sort of thing I'm looking for. It looks like a lot of the values are not application-specific and so I can't just update all the values in NSUserDefaults when I restore the data from my backup. Feb 18, 2012 at 16:24
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See this tutorial,

http://iphonebyradix.blogspot.in/2011/03/read-and-write-data-from-plist-file.html

To read user defaults , use this method

-(id)getFromNSUserDefaults:(NSString*)pForKey
{
    id pReturnObject;
    NSUserDefaults *defaults =[NSUserDefaults standardUserDefaults];
    pReturnObject = [defaults valueForKey:pForKey];
    return pReturnObject;
}
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  • Thanks Hadley, but the problem is I can't find the plist containing the NSUserDefaults settings Feb 18, 2012 at 12:59
  • For User defaults , you don't need to access .plist file ,you may directly access them
    – HarshIT
    Feb 18, 2012 at 13:00
  • Agreed, but I'm trying to backup the plist object as whole or the file in which it resides not read it Feb 18, 2012 at 13:02
  • You can get the plist properties in NSMutableDictionary ,and so you may store any object in NSUserDefaults and can also access them on requirement. Are you stuck with retrieving the object from UserDefaults ?
    – HarshIT
    Feb 18, 2012 at 13:09
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Reading the settings into my own plist and saving that to the documents directory is an option but seems inelegant and overly complicated. Is there a better way?

Given that there is no official API (that I know of) that directly supports what you want, I find it quite elegant and not very complicated to write a few lines of code that create your own .plist file. See yuji's answer for a starting point: Just one line and you already have a dictionary with all the settings that you want. How much more elegant can it get? :-)

It may not be the answer you would have liked to hear, but my advice is: Don't try to fight the system, you usually lose in the long run.

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