Cody Robertson
Cody Robertson

Reputation: 182

NSPredicate with dynamic key and value

I am trying to create a function that searches through my core data stack and return the amount of messages for a desired key/value.

Here is my code:

NSFetchRequest      *messagesCountRequest = [NSFetchRequest fetchRequestWithEntityName:@"Message"];
NSEntityDescription *messageCountModel    = [NSEntityDescription entityForName:@"Message" inManagedObjectContext:_mainManagedObjectContext];

[messagesCountRequest setEntity:messageCountModel];

NSPredicate *messageCountPredicate = [NSPredicate predicateWithFormat:@"%@ == %@", key, value];

[messagesCountRequest setPredicate:messageCountPredicate];

count = (int)[_mainManagedObjectContext countForFetchRequest:messagesCountRequest error:nil];

The problem is that it returns 0 every time. I have located the source of the problem. When have a static key, the predicate looks like this.

key == "value"

When I pass through a dynamic key, it looks like this

"key" == "value"

So the problem appears to be the first set of double quotes around the key that is placed by passing a NSString to the predicate. How would I fix this?

EDIT: For clarity, I need it to be like the first case, that is the one that works.

Upvotes: 10

Views: 3117

Answers (2)

NaveenReddy
NaveenReddy

Reputation: 695

 let predicate = NSPredicate(format: "SELF[%@] CONTAINS %@",key,value)

This worked for me

Upvotes: 0

Martin R
Martin R

Reputation: 539975

To substitute a key in the predicate string, you have to use %K, not %@:

[NSPredicate predicateWithFormat:@"%K == %@", key, value];

From the Predicate Format String Syntax documentation:

  • %@ is a var arg substitution for an object value—often a string, number, or date.
  • %K is a var arg substitution for a key path.

Upvotes: 34

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