Reputation: 4738
I have an Objective-C model class MyType. This class is used in Swift code:
NSEntityDescription.insertNewObjectForEntityForName("MyType", inManagedObjectContext: context) as! MyType
The as!
cast results in the error message
Core Data: Could not cast value of type 'MyType_MyType_2' (0x7be99a30) to MyType (0xf33db74).
If I cast it as NSManagedObject
it works. When I print the result, I can nevertheless see, that it is an actual instance of MyType:
<MyType: 0x7ae06d50> (entity: MyType; id: 0x7aeba6d0 <x-coredata:///MyType/t957F2860-85F8-46E0-B6D6-4D1DF6C4EC613> ; data: {
...the fields...
})
What is happening here? And where does the name MyType_MyType_2
come from?
Upvotes: 30
Views: 10970
Reputation: 844
I had mistakenly set a "parent entity" in one of my entities in the data model inspector in the entity section. I mistakenly thought that referred to the destination of a one-to-many relationship.
Setting it back to "no parent entity" fixed the problem, although I did have to delete and reinstall the app in the simulator to deal with the messed up core data database.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 4383
just try this:
@objc(MyType)
public class MyType: NSManagedObject {
// your class
}
instead of this:
class MyType: NSManagedObject {
// your class
}
Upvotes: 7
Reputation: 4471
Upvotes: 40
Reputation: 2596
When I had this issue, it was because I had forgotten to set the "class" on the entity. This is what I came up with:
You'll even notice before you follow these steps that the default "class" is NSObject, reflecting the error message. I found some programatic ways to do this too, but this seemed like the simplest/quickest solution.
I should note that my model WAS written in Swift, so I did have to add the @objc(Entity) interoperability reference mentioned by @zellb. But that shouldn't make a difference in the solution as long as you are doing that part properly (and that would cause a different unrelated error from my understanding).
Upvotes: 46