Currently I have a UITableView with its data source being an NSFetchedResultsController. The most important thing the NSFetchedResultsController does is automatically update my table if there are any changes, via delegate methods. However, I no longer need to do a fetch to get my entity, call it "Pictures" for now. I have another entity called Folder, and folders have a relationship with Pictures, so every folder has an NSSet pictures.
So instead of fetching all pictures that belong to a certain folder, now I can just do folder.pictures, and that returns what I need, and I can assign that to an array and set that as my tableView source. However, this doesn’t give me automatic table updates like an NSFetchedResultsController would.
My question is how can I have the functionality of an NSFetchedResultsController (that is, the delegate methods that automatically update my table) without executing a fetch? I don’t need to fetch anymore since I have an NSSet with the desired NSManagedObjects.
What’s wrong with the fetched results controller? Just keep it and use the dot notation for relationship sets as well – you get the best of both worlds.
The real advantage of the fetched results controller is actually hidden. It will fetch your objects (
folders) alright – but maybe it will not fetch all the relationship attributes (pictures). This is called faulting. It means that core data will get the data in the background if it is needed. It is automatically optimized for speed and good memory usage. For example, the potentially huge array of your datasource will not have to be all in memory at once, something that is unavoidable with an array.Thus, you really do not want to get rid of the FRC. She is your friend. Stay faithful to her. 😉