Commit Graph

4 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Blake Watters
457a6126cf Refresh copyright notices for all source files 2012-04-04 09:08:54 -04:00
Blake Watters
57183b364f Fix for warning emitted due to elimination of findOrCreateInstanceOfEntity:. Search Word functionality restored. closes #584
* Updates to the Core Data layer such that NSManagedObjectContexts now have a reference to the managed object store
they belong to.
* NSManagedObject instances can now return the managed object store they belong to.
* Relaxed the coupling to the sharedManager present within the RKSearchableManagedObject class.
* Expanded documentation of RKSearchableManagedObject
2012-03-14 17:08:02 -04:00
Blake Watters
4142ffdb42 Reorganization and cleanups of Unit Tests
* Reorganized tests to accommodate split into Logic & Application.
* Eliminated 'Spec' naming in favor of 'Test' as the suite is entirely based on SenTest.
* Pulled majority of testing support classes up into the library and documented them.
* Introduced RKApplicationTests app for running the RKTableController UI tests
2012-02-10 17:32:23 -05:00
Blake Watters
3d0f0ab39e Introduced the RKTableController component for iOS.
RKTableController provides a flexible, integrated system for driving iOS table views using
the RestKit object mapping engine. Local domain objects can be mapped into table cells within a
collection or presented for editing as part of a form. There are three flavors of table controllers
available:

* Static Tables: RKTableController can be used to render simple static tables that are composed of RKTableItems
presented in RKTableSections. Table items can quickly be built and added to a table without a backing model
or can have content object mapped into them for presentation.
* Network Tables: RKTableController can also render a table with the results of a network load. The typical use
case here is to have RestKit retrieve a JSON/XML payload from your remote system and then render the content into
a table.
* Core Data Tables: RKFetchedResultsTableController can efficiently drive a table view using objects pulled from a
Core Data managed object context. Typical use-cases here are for the presentation of large collections that are
pulled from a remote system, offering offline access, or speeding up a UI by using Core Data as a fast local cache.

RKTableController supports a number of bells and whistles including integrated searching/filtering and pull to refresh.
2012-02-10 16:30:54 -05:00