At 9:54 AM -0700 5/22/08, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> A MOC is associated with a persistent store coordinator. A PSC can
 have multiple stores associated with it.

 What you do not get for free is cross-store relationships.

Which is how I understood it, and I'm willing to write some glue here. But do you have any pointers on how to get started with that? I
haven't been able to figure out with a multi-store PSC, how to direct
some objects to one store and others to another. Examples of using
fetched properties to create cross-store relationships are also seems pretty thin in the main docs. Are there any good references on Core
Data beyond the fairly straight-forward Department app?

In /Developer/Examples/CoreData is the iClass example which demonstrates cross store relationships. It's a bit dated, so using transformable properties might clean things up. But it shows the issues involved.

In addition to use the URI form of an NSManagedObjectID, you could assign UUIDs to your objects and reconstitute the cross store relationships by fetching them. Using URIs will be faster (leveraging Core Data's faulting & caching mechanism) but using your own UUID attribute will let you do things like copy the data to another store (like via drag & drop in a document) and copy it back, and still maintain the object's "identity" in your own application specific meaning.

Aperture does something like that so people can export records, share them, and reimport them and have the original library understand that these are updated records instead of new records.

Using Core Data's URIs only preserves identity to the (store, entity, object) tuple, so copy the data to a different store gives it a new identity.

It looks like there have been many CD improvements in Leopard (transformable attributes being the one that really jumps out to me). It looks like it may be time for me to re-read all the docs and try again with the new 10.5 features.

There were a lot of improvements to Core Data in 10.5. Transformable properties, dynamic properties, schema migration, a public atomic store API, innumerable performance enhancements, 64 bit & garbage collection support, and many new options on NSFetchRequest.

<http://developer.apple.com/releasenotes/Cocoa/CoreDataReleaseNotes/>
--

-Ben
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