iOS Persistence and Core Data
About this Course
Persisting data is a core skill for any iOS developer. This course will teach you three techniques for storing data to your device’s hard drive: NSUserPreferences for small amounts of data, the Sandbox for files and Core Data when you have to play in the Big Leagues!
Persisting data is a core skill for any iOS developer. Learn how to store app data to your device using three common techniques: NSUserDefaults, Sandbox, and Core Data.
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Just …
iOS Persistence and Core Data
About this Course
Persisting data is a core skill for any iOS developer. This course will teach you three techniques for storing data to your device’s hard drive: NSUserPreferences for small amounts of data, the Sandbox for files and Core Data when you have to play in the Big Leagues!
Persisting data is a core skill for any iOS developer. Learn how to store app data to your device using three common techniques: NSUserDefaults, Sandbox, and Core Data.
[
Just like computers, your iPhone has two types of memory: main memory (RAM) and the hard drive. In all the apps you’ve written, you’ve interacted with RAM, but this memory is limited, and it’s important that the apps you design use it as efficiently as possible. To use the RAM efficiently it is important to be able to store data on the hard drive.
,It is also important for your apps to maintain state when they are turned off. The apps you’ve built probably aren’t persistent, meaning that they don’t save their state to the device’s hard drive. As RAM is volatile, data is lost when the app stops running. In this course, you’ll learn how to persist the state of the device using NSUserDefaults and Core Data.
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lesson 1
Simple Persistence
Learn about simple persistence and how to save small pieces of data.
Set user preferences using NSUserDefaults in an existing app.
Enable an app’s user preferences to appear in the Settings app.
lesson 2
The iOS File System
Learn about the iOS File System, and your app’s sandbox.
Read and save files using NSFileManager in an existing app.
Understand the performance implications of atomic (all-at-once) file operations.
lesson 3
Introducing Core Data
Meet Core Data, Apple’s framework for managing the data layer.
Explore what a data layer is.
Convert a non-Core Data note-taking app to have a Core Data model.
lesson 4
The Core Data Stack
Set up the classes we need to get Core Data up and running.
Use the stack to manage model object creation and deletion.
Persist changes so that data stays put when you restart the app or device.
lesson 5
Simpler Code with Core Data
Enable user interfaces to reactively update whenever the model changes.
Set up an NSFetchedResultsController to observe data changes and notify the UI.
Create a new version of a data model, modify a table view to work with a fetched results controller, and turn on caching.
lesson 6
Core Data & Concurrency
Update the data model and safely migrate user data between versions.
Work with multiple managed object contexts for different types of tasks.
Keep the user interface responsive by sending lengthy tasks to a background queue.