My document-based Cocoa application uses a NSOutlineView/NSTreeController combo, bound to the document’s Core Data store. My NSTreeController has the fetch predicate isRoot == YES. isRoot is a transient boolean attribute with a default value of NO. My root model’s awakeFromInsert calls:
[self setIsRoot:[NSNumber numberWithBool:YES]];
I’m able to add objects to the hierarchy just fine, but when I try to load a document I just saved, I get an exception:
[<NSDictionaryMapNode 0x1001a8190> valueForUndefinedKey:]: this class is not key value coding-compliant for the key isRoot.
I can work around this exception and successfully load a newly-saved document if I change the isRoot attribute to non-transient in the xcdatamodel, but based on my understanding of the transient flag it should not cause a problem, and this really isn’t the kind of data that should be persisted.
I have also tried implementing -isRoot in the NSManagedObject subclasses to return the appropriate fixed value, as well as making the same setIsRoot: call within awakeFromFetch, both to no avail.
Is there some other subtlety I’m missing? I can’t imagine that fetch predicates don’t support transient attributes. I don’t know much about the inner workings of Core Data but it seems interesting that it’s trying to look up isRoot on the store-specific class and not my NSManagedObject subclass.
After a bit of research, I can tell you that they don’t. See this document. Quote:
I’ve put together a test project and can verify I get exactly the same error as you do.
When I need to filter out the root nodes in a tree, I use a fetch predicate of
parent == nilinstead of a transient attribute.I understand your reaction – I too wanted way of having an attribute specifically called isRoot too. My guess is it’s possible, but it’d take so much code it’s just not worth the hassle.
Oh, and if you’re dealing with core data any more than a little, mogenerator will make your life much easier.