NSPredicate case-insensitive matching on to-many relationship

Objective CCocoaCore Data

Objective C Problem Overview


I am implementing a search field where the user can type in a string to filter the items displayed in a view. Each object being displayed has a keywords to-many relationship, and I would like to be able to filter the objects based on their keywords. Each keyword object has a name property, so I've set up an NSPredicate to do the filtering that looks like this:

NSPredicate* predicate = [NSPredicate predicateWithFormat:@"keywords.name CONTAINS %@", self.searchString];

This works, but the problem is that the search is case-sensitive, so if the keyword has a capital letter but the user types in all lowercase, no matches are found. I've tried the following modification:

NSPredicate* predicate = [NSPredicate predicateWithFormat:@"keywords.name CONTAINS[c] %@", self.searchString];

But that doesn't make any difference in the case sensitivity of the matching. Is there a way to do this case-insensitive matching using just a plain predicate? Or will I need to implement some sort of custom accessor on the keyword class, e.g. write a lowercaseName method and match against a lowercased version of the search string instead?

Addendum: After further exploration, the workaround of adding a custom accessor works OK for manual use of NSPredicate, but does not work at all when using NSFetchRequest with Core Data, which only works when querying attributes defined in the Core Data model.

Objective C Solutions


Solution 1 - Objective C

If I understand you correctly, you want your predicate to be true whenever any keywords name matches the search string. For this you need to test with the ANY keyword like this:

[NSPredicate predicateWithFormat:@"ANY keywords.name CONTAINS[c] %@", ...];

This will search the keywords and return true if any of those keywords name contains your search string.

Solution 2 - Objective C

I believe the answer is:

[NSPredicate predicateWithFormat:@"keywords.name CONTAINS[cd] %@", self.searchString];

> String comparisons are by default case and diacritic sensitive. You can modify an operator using the key characters c and d within square braces to specify case and diacritic insensitivity respectively, for example firstName BEGINSWITH[cd] $FIRST_NAME.

Predicate Format String Syntax

Solution 3 - Objective C

If you is trying to catch only the equals names but with insensitive case, I think it is the best solution

[NSPredicate predicateWithFormat:@"ANY keywords.name LIKE[c] %@", ...];

You helped me a lot. Thanks guys!!!

In my case I did:

[NSPredicate predicateWithFormat:@"ANY name LIKE[c] %@", @"teste"];

Solution 4 - Objective C

If you must match the keyword but the search must be case-insensitive then you should use NSPredicate(format: "keywords.name =[c] %@", self.searchString)

LIKE does not work on string literals.

Solution 5 - Objective C

If you want both case insensitive and wildcard, use this:

NSPredicate *predicate = [NSPredicate predicateWithFormat:[NSString stringWithFormat:@"(name like[c] '*%@*')",@"search"]];

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Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionBrian WebsterView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - Objective CAlfonsoView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - Objective CslatvickView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - Objective CwalView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - Objective Cnetshark1000View Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - Objective CSvenView Answer on Stackoverflow