Simran
Posted on April 8, 2024
Introduction
In this series I will go briefly over the 3 main components of the Core Data Stack.
- Data Model
- NSPersistentContainer
- NSManagedObjectContext
First we will just go over what is DataModel and how to use it in our iOS Project with CoreData
Data Model
Defined in the .xcdatamodeld
file, this includes all the models that we want to have to store data in Core Data. For example if we want to have a Folders
, Notes
, Tags
models for a notes app, than these will be defined in the .xcdatamodeld
file.
.xcdatamodeld
just holds the information about how the data will look like. Which means it just holds the classes for those models, the properties in those classes and the relationship between. In holds no actual data to be store. It is simply like a group folder named Models
we create in XCode when we want to group our models classes or structs in a single place. But here these models are always classes as they need to be of reference type as other parts that we are gonna discuss later needs to track each reference and any changes done to them.
New iOS Project
To create a data model lets create a new XCode project called CoreDataExample
Make sure the storege is selected as None
. We will create everything from scratch so we are not selecting any pre-existing type of storage. As that gives a lot of boilerplate code that can be confusing to many.
Now we get a very empty SwiftUI project that has no way to store data permanently.
Creating .xcdatamodeld
in our project
First we will create a new folder group in our project named Models
. Here we will keep the xcdatamodeld
file and all the related files which defines the models for Core Data, their extensions if any and any other helper model files we need in the app.
Now lets create a new file in the Models
folders and select Data Model
under Core Data
section in your file template window.
*** Now be very carefull here. Because the name that we give to this file is very important as we will use it later in the app to define other components of the Core Data stack. So name it in Pascal Case like a class and keep the name a bit simple to remember and find. I am naming it CoreDataExampleModel.xcdatamodeld
Creating our first Model/Entity in .xcdatamodeld
Now we have created our .xcdatamodeld
file which will store all our data models related to Core Data. We will follow a naming convention here which I personally use. You are free to not follow it and use your naming convention, but then please make sure that you make necessary changes in this series of articles later on. What I do is usually suffix my Core Data models with Entity
as it makes it easy to distinguish them from my other models in the project if I needs to create any later on.
So lets create our first model here named FolderEntity
. Now open the CoreDataExampleModel.xcdatamodeld
file and you will see something like this in your XCode.
Now you need to add an Entity which simply means you are creating a class which will define your data model. You create a new Entity by clicking the following icon in the xcdatamodeld
file that you opened.
Now you see an entity as been created with the name Entity
.
Just double click on it and rename to something else, in this case we will create an entity named FolderEntity
.
Now we would need to add an attribute to this entity which means we are adding a property to our class FolderEntity
.
Click on the + icon in the Attributes
section.
Now name the attribute to title
and select its type(data type) to be String
. We will explore other data types as well in upcoming articles but for right now we are keeping it simple here and using String
.
Now just make sure your project builds fine. This whole process has create a class named FolderEntity
with a property named title
underneath the xcdatamodeld
which is not directly visible to us. But if you projects builds trust me there is a class named FolderEntity
that now exists in your project somewhere hidden from your eyes. We will later also learn to create those classes as Swift files in your project, but not right now.
In the next article we will explore what is NSPersistentContainer
and how to create one for our project.
Posted on April 8, 2024
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