I’m using Core Data in my first iPhone application and trying to understand NSFetchedResultsController. It works great in my root view. Do I need to instantiate an instance in every one of my view controllers? If so, is there a template that makes this as easy as it was in my root controller (I just checked a box in the template when creating the project). When I add a single new view controller I don’t see an option to use Core Data.
Update: Even after I did cut/paste the code into my second view, it took me a while to realize that I also needed to set the managedObjectContext before switching to the new view. I added the following line to my RootViewController before pushing the new view on the navigation stack:
self.newVC.managedObjectContext = self.managedObjectContext;
If your other views are visualizing different Entities, then yes, you would use a different
NSFetchedResultsController. You can basically get away with copy-and-pasting the code from the autogenerated root view controller for your other view controllers… just change the Entity name.However, if the other (table) views down your hierarchy are just displaying different attributes of the same Entity, it’s more efficient/simpler to just pass the existing
NSFetchedResultsControllerobject down the hierarchy. Just create aNSFetchedResultsControllermember in the class interface and expose it as a property in the view controller’s .h file, and then synthesize the property and release it in its .m file. Then set the property before you push the view controller on the stack.