Offline app data [duplicate] - ios

I have created an app using ionic and cordova and now I want to remake it on iOS. I am working with iOS for the first time, and I cannot figure out how to store data.
For example: I have a form where user has to input some data, but the inputs are not in one view, there must be several views. I used to create empty array and just put everything step by step, but now i can't use same view controller on multiple views. Tried to do it with core data, but core data cannot store arrays. My object would look something like this:
var sampleArray = (
duration: 13,
dayOfTheWeek: Thursday,
personList: [
(name: Rocky,
age: 26),
(name: Ralph,
age:23)
]
)
The question would be: How could I make an input form which would be on several views and where should I store the data, and later I would be able to store all the data into core data?

You can work with persistent data in several ways on iOS.
User Default
This is a tool that is used to store small amounts of information like user settings, preferences etc. Don't use it for data that will scale with application usage (e.g. like notes in notepad app). Documentation will answer all your questions about User Defaults.
Database
You have Core Data as an out of the box solution which is build on top of the SQLite and takes some time to learn, but from my experience it's worth the effort. You are free to use pure SQLite or other database type, but it requires more code and probably custom frameworks.
Text files
You can use arbitrary XML, JSON or CSV files to store your data. Tooling is rich (e.g. NSXMLParser or SwifyJSON just to name two) and if you look on Github, you will find what you need. You can also use build in combination of NSCoder and NSKeyArchiver / NSKeyUnarchiver which are easy to grasp.
Binary files
Finally, for a local storage you can use binary files i.e. images. This is too advanced topic to cover here, but I want to share an example of Open Raster file format. It is used to save informations for drawing apps (eq. GIMP) and inside, it is basically an XML file and a bunch of images compressed to zip and named as .ora file. Creating your own specification for a hybrid format is not that hard.
Network repository
Just to not overlook other methods, you can use remote database API to store data outside of the device, but of course you need your own host and some backend skills.
I hope I didn't miss something important. I just wanted to sum up this knowledge in one place for future reference.

As the first comment says, your question is quite large.
When you say 'one form on several view', I consider it as 'one form per view'.
Keep It Simple S... ;)
(Except if you use page control for your form.)
Basically, you have three ways to store data :
NSUserDefaults :
Store data in Dictionary for later use
File :
Save data to a File (why not .csv like ?)
CoreData :
You can persist arrays as binary data in Core Data
There are numerous tutorials on these topics.
www.raywenderlich.com site is a good one to begin...

Related

iOS Application: Portable Data Storage of many Key/Values

What is a good way to store many key/value pair entries in a mobile (iOS) application, such that they can be easily exported/imported?
I have considered a single large JSON file - would this be too slow/large with 200,000+ entries?
I have also considered CoreData - but could the data be moved easily via, for example, email?
Think of an address book. Contacts can be easily imported/exported, what data storage model would be comparable?
Thank you.
EDIT: Examples
Notes - be able to select and view short notes in a table. Each note is < 100 characters.
Saved bookmarks - each bookmark is stored in a table.
I have considered a single large JSON file - would this be too
slow/large with 200,000+ entries?
I don't know. I can make a guess. The guess would be yes, it's both too large and too slow. However, you can always test it to find out.
I have also considered CoreData - but could the data be moved easily
via, for example, email?
That depends on how you want to share the data. You call email easy?
Core Data is a framework. You can use any type of backend you want (you can even write your own). The most common is probably SQLite.
If you use Core Data, you can keep the data files in a separate subdirectory and copy them just like any other file.
However, if you want to share data via an online service, you may want the ability to import/export JSON files.
If you are talking about synchronization, then that's a different beast entirely.
Basically, there is no single right answer. You have to assess your requirements, and then determine which solution meets your needs.
On the surface, it seems like using Core Data would be a good fit, but it depends on how you want to use the data in your application. Only you know that answer.

Advise where to store data for iOS app

I have created an app using ionic and cordova and now I want to remake it on iOS. I am working with iOS for the first time, and I cannot figure out how to store data.
For example: I have a form where user has to input some data, but the inputs are not in one view, there must be several views. I used to create empty array and just put everything step by step, but now i can't use same view controller on multiple views. Tried to do it with core data, but core data cannot store arrays. My object would look something like this:
var sampleArray = (
duration: 13,
dayOfTheWeek: Thursday,
personList: [
(name: Rocky,
age: 26),
(name: Ralph,
age:23)
]
)
The question would be: How could I make an input form which would be on several views and where should I store the data, and later I would be able to store all the data into core data?
You can work with persistent data in several ways on iOS.
User Default
This is a tool that is used to store small amounts of information like user settings, preferences etc. Don't use it for data that will scale with application usage (e.g. like notes in notepad app). Documentation will answer all your questions about User Defaults.
Database
You have Core Data as an out of the box solution which is build on top of the SQLite and takes some time to learn, but from my experience it's worth the effort. You are free to use pure SQLite or other database type, but it requires more code and probably custom frameworks.
Text files
You can use arbitrary XML, JSON or CSV files to store your data. Tooling is rich (e.g. NSXMLParser or SwifyJSON just to name two) and if you look on Github, you will find what you need. You can also use build in combination of NSCoder and NSKeyArchiver / NSKeyUnarchiver which are easy to grasp.
Binary files
Finally, for a local storage you can use binary files i.e. images. This is too advanced topic to cover here, but I want to share an example of Open Raster file format. It is used to save informations for drawing apps (eq. GIMP) and inside, it is basically an XML file and a bunch of images compressed to zip and named as .ora file. Creating your own specification for a hybrid format is not that hard.
Network repository
Just to not overlook other methods, you can use remote database API to store data outside of the device, but of course you need your own host and some backend skills.
I hope I didn't miss something important. I just wanted to sum up this knowledge in one place for future reference.
As the first comment says, your question is quite large.
When you say 'one form on several view', I consider it as 'one form per view'.
Keep It Simple S... ;)
(Except if you use page control for your form.)
Basically, you have three ways to store data :
NSUserDefaults :
Store data in Dictionary for later use
File :
Save data to a File (why not .csv like ?)
CoreData :
You can persist arrays as binary data in Core Data
There are numerous tutorials on these topics.
www.raywenderlich.com site is a good one to begin...

Simple read-only data storage in iOS (with easy editing and visualization)

I've used archiving, user defaults, and some Core Data in my apps before, but I'm running into a wall re: the best method for my current scenario. I have an app that needs to instantiate some objects from a resource file each time before it's used. An example of one of the objects could be a "MathQuestion" object that has the properties:
questionID (Int) - 2341
questionText (String) — "What is the square root of _?"
questionVariable (Float) – "4"
correctAnswer (a block/closure that returns a Float) – "{return sqrt(value)}".
Ideally, I'd just have something like a spreadsheet with columns for each of these properties and rows for each of the different questions. That way, I would really be able to visualize all the data and make quick changes during development.
My app uses Parse, which is great for visualization and easy editing of values, but for this case, I'd rather the resources remained on the device and not the Parse server. I've been considering Core Data up till this point, but (this could be my inexperience with C.D.), I'm unaware of any way to manually edit the data—and it seems like it may be overkill for what I'm looking for anyways. (I basically just need a way to upload and parse a CSV!) Any advice would be welcome!
I would still recommend Core Data. It is simply the most efficient and scalable mechanism to store and retrieve data.
When I work in your kind of scenario, what I often do is work with a spreadsheet where I can conveniently edit the data. You could edit a CSV version of it that you have included in your target. (If this does not work for you, you could also copy paste into a separate CSV file right into Xcode.)
On every start, you just trash the data store (using NSFileManager when creating the NSPersistentStoreCoordinator). Then you call a method that reads in the CSV and stores it in Core Data.
Once you are done with development, you simply keep the sqlite file (you can include it in the bundle and copy it over, or re-generate it from your CSV the first time the app runs).

Initialize Core Data With Default Data

I have a basic question regarding populating Core Data with data. I am building an application, which will show ATMs on a map. I would like to ship the application with a preloaded database, but to give users the option to receive updates when they launch the app. I am thinking about using a property list for the update. Basically send a plist of all the ATMs, parse that plist and populate the sqlite. I will have around 7000 entries in the property list file, each entry containing 5-6 keys with short string values. But according to the Apple iOS Developer Library:
You can create a property list—or some other file-based
representation—of the data, and store it as an application resource.
When you want to use it, you must open the file and parse the
representation to create managed objects. You should not use this
technique on iOS, and only if absolutely necessary on Mac OS X.
Parsing a file to create a store incurs unnecessary overhead. It is
much better to create a Core Data store yourself offline and use it
directly in your application.
Should I still be sending a property list or rather think for an alternative solution to update the application's database?
P.S. I am thinking about using a Rails app for providing updates - basically sending a plist file.
I had nearly the same question a few months back, did quite a bit of searching to find a nice easy answer, failed to find it and eventually settled on a roll-your-own solution that took a bit more time than I would have hoped, but was at least very helpful in learning to understand Core Data.
Basically the solution was to write a little utility that parsed my source data (which for me is a comma-separated text file, parsed using the quite handy 'cCSVParse' library - http://michael.stapelberg.de/cCSVParse ) and inserted it into Core Data Managed Objects and then saved that off as a sqlite persistent store. Then the sqlite store(s) can be shipped with the app, and uploaded by the user when they buy more data.
You could write a conversion from plist (or whatever) into the core data representation within the app itself, but if the data is just going live out the rest of its days in some core data form, why not let your beefy dev box do the heavy lifting before you send the data to the user, instead of shipping the data to the phone and making it do the work?

plists vs Core Data for holding parameters

I am writing an iPad app that will be expandable with new items via in-app purchasing. For example, my current plan is to have a jpg pattern and a matching plist file with the parameters I need to expand that pattern into a full picture.
The user will select one jpg/png from a list of small thumbnails - the list is held in Core Data - and the app will find the matching plist for displaying the jpg/png correctly. I'll only have about 10 of these open at one time. But I could end up with storing 1000s of jpgs and plists.
Does storage of lots of small files cause app problems?
I'm going the plist way, rather than storing the parameters in Core Data, so that if I need to add parameters later, I don't have to migrate the database, just change the access in code. (And when I'm creating the patterns, it's easier to concentrate on a plist file rather than a Core Data row.)
The app seems to work really well at the moment, but I'm worried about futures...
My app does also use Core Data for other things, so I could change over if the app will get bogged down with number of files.
Thanks.
Saving a large number of small files is not a problem as long as you have a well thought out means of naming and tracking the files.
Remember that the user does not have the same flexibility and ease of file management on a mobile as they do on non-mobile platforms. Designs that work on non-mobiles are unworkable on a device used on the move with one finger.
However, when you say:
And when I'm creating the patterns,
it's easier to concentrate on a plist
file rather than a Core Data row.
... the use of "row" suggest that you haven't fully grasped Core Data's utility. Core Data doesn't use rows, columns, tables or joins. It's an object graph management system that sometimes uses SQL way behind the scenes.
Core Data is designed to handle data in a way that meshes seamlessly with the rest of the object oriented API for the UI and other services. When you use other data management systems like plist, you will most likely end up manually duplicating a lot of Core Data's functionality anyway.

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