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Home/ Questions/Q 6685659
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 26, 20262026-05-26T05:04:56+00:00 2026-05-26T05:04:56+00:00

If NSFetchRequest is the Core Data equivalent of an SQL query containing SELECT ,

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If NSFetchRequest is the Core Data equivalent of an SQL query containing SELECT, is there a Core Data equivalent of the SQL command UPDATE?

Or in other words, if I want to change values on a Core Data set, is there a way around iterating over the results of an NSFetchRequest?

In case you’re answering with ‘no’, I’d very much appreciate some kind of reference documentation. Cheers!

EDIT: By ‘iteration’ I mean that I know how to for-loop over the entities and changes values:

NSArray *results = [context executeFetchRequest:...];
for (NSManagedObject *object in results) {
    object.value = anotherValue;
}

But if they’re all getting the same value on the same property, I’d just like to call something like [context executeChangesOnFetchRequest:...]. Of course this method does not exist, but maybe there is a more elegant/concise way than the for-loop.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-26T05:04:57+00:00Added an answer on May 26, 2026 at 5:04 am

    Well, no. If you want changes to be made on the object context in which the Core Data objects reside, you must set the respective properties on said objects and then commit the changes on that object context. Core Data will handle all the optimizations for you.

    If you’re simply looking for a way to avoid a for loop to update properties on objects in the result set, you can try using makeObjectsPerformSelector:withObject:.

    NSFetchRequest *req = ...;
    NSError *error = nil;
    NSArray *results = [self.managedObjectContext executeFetchRequest:req error:&error];
    if(error != nil) {
      //oops.
    } else {
       //avoid the loop:
       [results makeObjectsPerformSelector:@selector(setSomeProperty:) withObject:someValue];
    
       if(![self.managedObjectContext save:nil]) {
          //error during save
       }
    }
    

    For the adventurous, you can try adding a category on NSManagedObjectContext:

    @interface NSManagedObjectContext (JRAdditions)
    
    - (BOOL) executeChanges:(NSDictionary *) changes 
           withFetchRequest:(NSFetchRequest *) request
                      error:(NSError **) error;
    @end
    
    @implementation NSManagedObjectContext (JRAdditions)
    
    - (BOOL) executeChanges:(NSDictionary *) changes 
           withFetchRequest:(NSFetchRequest *) request
                      error:(NSError **) error {
    
       NSArray *results = [self executeFetchRequest:request error:error];
       if(*error || ![results count]) return NO;
    
       [results makeObjectsPerformSelector:@selector(setValuesForKeysWithDictionary:)
                                withObject:changes];
       return [self save:error];
    }
    
    @end
    

    You could then call this like so:

    NSDictionary *changes = [NSDictionary dictionaryWithObjectsAndKeys:@"value1", @"key1", @"value2", @"key2", nil];
    NSFetchRequest *request = ...;
    NSError *error = nil;
    
    if([self.managedObjectContext executeChanges:changes withFetchRequest:request error:&error]) {
       //done.
    } else {
       //error.
    }
    
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