You can actually grab the model fetched property and add the sort descriptors to it (again, in code). I did this in the standard method that XCode generates in your AppDelegate if you choose one of the templates with Core Data:
By the way. This sorts ALL fetched properties on ALL models in your data model. You could get fancy and adaptive with it, but it was the most succinct way to handle sorting the 7 separate models that each had fetched properties that needed to be sorted by name. Works well.
/**
Returns the managed object model for the application.
If the model doesn't already exist, it is created by merging all of the models found in the application bundle.
*/
- (NSManagedObjectModel *)managedObjectModel {
if (managedObjectModel != nil) {
return managedObjectModel;
}
managedObjectModel = [[NSManagedObjectModel mergedModelFromBundles:nil] retain];
// Find the fetched properties, and make them sorted...
for (NSEntityDescription *entity in [managedObjectModel entities]) {
for (NSPropertyDescription *property in [entity properties]) {
if ([property isKindOfClass:[NSFetchedPropertyDescription class]]) {
NSFetchedPropertyDescription *fetchedProperty = (NSFetchedPropertyDescription *)property;
NSFetchRequest *fetchRequest = [fetchedProperty fetchRequest];
// Only sort by name if the destination entity actually has a "name" field
if ([[[[fetchRequest entity] propertiesByName] allKeys] containsObject:@"name"]) {
NSSortDescriptor *sortByName = [[NSSortDescriptor alloc] initWithKey:@"name" ascending:YES];
[fetchRequest setSortDescriptors:[NSArray arrayWithObject:sortByName]];
[sortByName release];
}
}
}
}
return managedObjectModel;
}
与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…