As pointed out in another question on SO (and the Apple docs), NSManagedObject
instances do not hold a strong reference to the NSManagedObjectContext
from which they originated. On first blush, this seems like a strange decision, since NSManagedObject
instances are nearly useless without their context
, since it leads to confusing bugs such as faults not firing when they should.
Can anyone provide some background on why this is the case? Would it be dangerous to implement an NSManagedObject
subclass that automatically holds a strong reference to its NSManagedObjectContext
?
Edit: thanks to great answers to this question, I've discovered that my managed objects were created against an intentionally temporary NSManagedObjectContext
by RestKit. This follows into my next question, specific to RestKit, here.
As others pointed out, this would be dangerous because you'd be creating a retain cycle.
A better practice would be to subscribe to the Notification
Here you could update your objects whenever the context notifies you that it changed them.
Example:
Also, as Apple points out, be sure to pass the context you want to observe:
This is because you otherwise would get a retain cycle. The managed object context internally uses arrays and other containers which have references to the managed objects.
Possibly, this retain cycle cannot be "explicitly broken" that easily by the internal implementation of Core Data, so that this reference has to be weak.
It makes more sense for an
NSManagedObjectContext
to own itsNSManagedObject
s than the other way around.Keep in mind that the context is like a draw pad with all its objects on it. If that context goes away, the objects are no longer valid. If the objects owned the context, then the context going away would do nothing to the objects and they still appeared to be valid. In other words: a context can exist without objects, objects can't exist without a context.
Of course, a hybrid model (where a context owns its objects and objects own their context) wouldn't work either, because then you would run into a retain cycle.
They can be (though not necessarily), but remember that they do have a reference to their context! Presumably it's a weak reference, but a reference nonetheless. If that reference returns nil, the object is invalid. If you make sure your context stays around (which is what I did in my answer to the other question), you won't have any issues.