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Home/ Questions/Q 219121
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T18:48:54+00:00 2026-05-11T18:48:54+00:00

Apparently, I’ve been working with bindings too long, because I can’t figure out how

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Apparently, I’ve been working with bindings too long, because I can’t figure out how to do this. I have a table with several columns. When a row is selected, you can edit its priority, which modifies a core data attribute. I’ve also set this as an IBAction. Basically, I want to access the value of the Core Data attribute from my code. Then, I want to set the first column of whatever row is selected (and had its priority changed) to a number of exclamation marks corresponding to the priority level.

Sorry this is worded confusingly; here’s an example:

Row 7 is selected. I change its priority to 2. Now, the Core Data attribute myPriority is set to 2. A code block is now triggered. It gets the priority of the selected row (row 7) form Core Data and wants to set column 1 of the selected row (row 7) to 2 exclamation marks (priority 2).

Thanks!

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-11T18:48:55+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 6:48 pm

    If you’re used to bindings, then I’d recommend looking at NSValueTransformer; specifically, creating a subclass of that which converts a priority value to a string of exclamation marks. You’d then simply provide the name (the same one used in +setValueTransformer:forName:) as the ‘value transformer’ attribute in your bindings.

    For instance, the code would look like so:

    @interface PriorityTransformer : NSValueTransformer
    @end
    
    @implementation PriorityTransformer
    + (Class) transformedValueClass { return ( [NSString class] ); }
    + (BOOL) allowsReverseTransformation { return ( NO ); }
    - (id) transformedValue: (id) value
    {
        // this makes the string creation a bit simpler
        static unichar chars[MAX_PRIORITY_VALUE] = { 0 };
        if ( chars[0] == 0 )
        {
            // ideally you'd use a spinlock or such to ensure it's setup before 
            //  another thread uses it
            int i;
            for ( i = 0; i < MAX_PRIORITY_VALUE; i++ )
                chars[i] = (unichar) '!';
        }
    
        return ( [NSString stringWithCharacters: chars
                                         length: [value unsignedIntegerValue]] );
    }
    @end
    

    You would then put this code into the same file as a central class (such as the application delegate) and register it through that class’s +initialize method to ensure it’s registered in time for any nibs to find it:

    + (void) initialize
    {
        // +initialize is called for each class in a hierarchy, so always
        //  make sure you're being called for your *own* class, not some sub- or
        //  super-class which doesn't have its own implementation of this method
        if ( self != [MyClass class] )
            return;
    
        PriorityTransformer * obj = [[PriorityTransformer alloc] init];
        [NSValueTransformer setValueTransformer: obj forName: @"PriorityTransformer"];
        [obj release];   // obj is retained by the transformer lookup table
    }
    
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