I'm pretty new to Android development in general, and I've never even used greenDAO. But after spending a lot of time working on my generator class (Where I model my entities), I was finally able to produce something that looked similar to the example given on GitHub.
import de.greenrobot.daogenerator.DaoGenerator;
import de.greenrobot.daogenerator.Entity;
import de.greenrobot.daogenerator.Property;
import de.greenrobot.daogenerator.Schema;
import de.greenrobot.daogenerator.ToMany;
public class simbalDAOgen {
public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
Schema schema = new Schema(1, "com.bkp.simbal"); //Schema(Int version, String package name)
addCBTrans(schema); //Add the entities to the schema
new DaoGenerator().generateAll(schema, "../Simbal/src-gen", "../Simbal/src-test"); //Generate DAO files
}
private static void addCBTrans(Schema schema){
Entity checkbook = schema.addEntity("Checkbook");
checkbook.addIdProperty();
checkbook.addStringProperty("name").notNull();
checkbook.addDateProperty("dateModified");
checkbook.addStringProperty("balance"); // Use a string property because BigDecimal type should be used for currency
Entity transaction = schema.addEntity("Transaction");
transaction.setTableName("TRANS"); // "TRANSACTION" is a reserved SQLite keyword
transaction.addIdProperty();
transaction.addStringProperty("name");
transaction.addStringProperty("category");
Property transDate = transaction.addDateProperty("date").getProperty();
transaction.addStringProperty("amount"); // Again use string for BigDecimal type
transaction.addStringProperty("notes");
Property cbName = transaction.addStringProperty("cb").notNull().getProperty(); //What checkbook the transaction is in
ToMany cbToTrans = checkbook.addToMany(transaction, cbName); //Actually ties the transactions to their correct checkbooks
cbToTrans.setName("Transactions");
cbToTrans.orderAsc(transDate);
}
}
I then ran the code as a java application to generate my DAO files, just like the documentation on greenDAO says to. The files were successfully generated, however I did get this line in the console in Eclipse:
Warning to-one property type does not match target key type: ToMany 'Transactions' from Checkbook to Transaction
I'm really not sure if I need to be concerned since the files were generated. But what I don't understand is why there's mention of a "to-one" relation when I'm using a "to-many" relation, as can be seen in my code. (There can be many transaction entities in a checkbook entity, and I'm intending to use each checkbook entitys' name to tie the transactions to it.)
Do I need to go back and fix a part of my code? Please ask if I need to clarify anything, and thanks for your time!