I am building an application which uses a Core Data database to store its data on products. These products are displayed in a UICollectionView
. Each cell in this collection view displays basic information on the product it contains, including an image.
Although the cells are relatively small, the original images they display are preferably quite large as they should also be able to be displayed in a larger image view. The images are loaded directly from Core Data in my CellForItemAtIndexPath:
Method:
func collectionView(_ collectionView: UICollectionView, cellForItemAt indexPath: IndexPath) -> UICollectionViewCell {
let cell = collectionView.dequeueReusableCell(withReuseIdentifier: "Cell", for: indexPath) as! CollectionWineCell
var current: Product!
//product details are set on labels
//image is set
if current.value(forKey: "image") != nil {
let image = current.value(forKey: "image") as! WineImage
let loadedImage = UIImage(data: image.image)
cell.imageview.image = loadedImage
} else {
cell.imageview.image = UIImage(named: "ProductPlaceholder.png")
}
return cell
}
When the collection of products grows, scrolling gets bumpier and a lot of frames are dropped. This makes sense to me, but so far I haven't found a suitable solution. When looking online a lot of documentation and frameworks are available for asynchronous image loading from a URL (either online or a file path), but doing this from Core Data does not seem very common.
I have already tried doing it using an asynchronous fetch request:
let fetchRequest = NSFetchRequest<NSFetchRequestResult>(entityName:"ProductImage")
fetchRequest.predicate = NSPredicate(format: "product = %@", current)
let asyncRequest = NSAsynchronousFetchRequest(fetchRequest: fetchRequest) { results in
if let results = results.finalResult {
let result = results[0] as! ProductImage
let loadedImage = UIImage(data: result.image)
DispatchQueue.main.async(execute: {
cell.wineImage.image = loadedImage
})
}
}
_ = try! managedObjectContext.executeRequest(asyncRequest)
However, this approach does not seems to smoothen things out either
QUESTION
When displaying large sets of data, including images, from Core Data, how does one load images in a way that it does not cause lags and frame drops in a UICollectionView
?