I'm implementing a search in an iOS app (targeting iOS 8 and up), and have a set of entities that store search terms for other objects. The search term entities have an abstract parent. Each concrete search term entity has a relationship to the object it relates to (an object can have many search terms). This way I can run a fetch request against the abstract parent search term entity, and through each concrete result get to the object that matches. As an example:
I'm then making a request like this to find matches for a given string:
NSString *text = @"query";
NSFetchRequest *fetchRequest = [NSFetchRequest fetchRequestWithEntityName:@"AbstractSearchTerm"];
fetchRequest.predicate = [NSPredicate predicateWithFormat:@"term CONTAINS[cd] %@", text];
NSSortDescriptor *boostSortDescriptor = [NSSortDescriptor sortDescriptorWithKey:@"boost" ascending:NO];
fetchRequest.sortDescriptors = @[boostSortDescriptor];
NSError *error = nil;
[self.managedObjectContext executeFetchRequest:fetchRequest error:&error];
The fetch request is then fed to a NSFetchedResultsController
which drives a table view of search results. This works well enough except that I get multiple results for each Category
, Tag
etc. because of the to-many relationship to the search term (I can't use a to-one relationship because some results need to be be boosted over others). So I thought to somehow group the results by the actual entity that they relate to.
Firstly - if there's a better way to achieve what I'm trying to do without having to get into grouping then I'm all ears. Perhaps something using subqueries.. Otherwise, here's where it gets messy!
In order to group results I obviously need something to group on; I have a unique identifier for each record (e.g. one from my remote API) which I can denormalise to a property on AbstractSearchTerm
, so I can use that. I modified my fetch request like so:
NSEntityDescription *entityDescription = [NSEntityDescription entityForName:@"AbstractSearchTerm" inManagedObjectContext:self.managedObjectContext];
NSDictionary *entityProperties = [entityDescription propertiesByName];
NSString *text = @"query";
NSFetchRequest *fetchRequest = [NSFetchRequest fetchRequestWithEntityName:@"AbstractSearchTerm"];
// ...
fetchRequest.propertiesToFetch = @[entityProperties[@"uniqueIdentifier"], entityProperties[@"term"], entityProperties[@"boost"]];
fetchRequest.propertiesToGroupBy = @[entityProperties[@"uniqueIdentifier"], entityProperties[@"term"], entityProperties[@"boost"]];
fetchRequest.resultType = NSDictionaryResultType;
NSError *error = nil;
[self.managedObjectContext executeFetchRequest:fetchRequest error:&error];
And I get results, but I don't have the objectID to work back to the actual search object, and thus to the matched relation. So I thought to also retrieve the objectID. There's a way to do that, according to this answer, but when I try it like so:
NSExpressionDescription* objectIdDesc = [[NSExpressionDescription alloc] init];
objectIdDesc.name = @"objectID";
objectIdDesc.expression = [NSExpression expressionForEvaluatedObject];
objectIdDesc.expressionResultType = NSObjectIDAttributeType;
// ...
fetchRequest.propertiesToFetch = @[objectIdDesc, entityProperties[@"uniqueIdentifier"], entityProperties[@"term"], entityProperties[@"boost"]];
fetchRequest.propertiesToGroupBy = @[objectIdDesc, entityProperties[@"uniqueIdentifier"], entityProperties[@"term"], entityProperties[@"boost"]];
I get this error:
Invalid keypath expression ((<NSExpressionDescription: 0x7f9e89454e50>), name objectID, isOptional 1, isTransient 0, entity (null), renamingIdentifier objectID, validation predicates (
), warnings (
), versionHashModifier (null)
userInfo {
}) passed to setPropertiesToFetch:
Which I can't get around. It may be a bug in Core Data, or perhaps that approach isn't valid when the fetch request has a group by clause. Without a way to get back to a concrete entity instance I'm stuck. Since I'm going to be querying an amount of records in at least the tens of thousands I don't want to be making too many queries or putting a lot of data in memory, so until now I've ruled out storing results in an array and filtering them in code (I'd prefer to keep using NSFetchedResultsController and batch results). If anyone has any advice on where I could go from here I'd really appreciate it.