iOS 9 and later:
iOS 9 added a new class called NSBatchDeleteRequest
that allows you to easily delete objects matching a predicate without having to load them all in to memory. Here's how you'd use it:
Swift 5
let fetchRequest: NSFetchRequest<NSFetchRequestResult> = NSFetchRequest(entityName: "Car")
let deleteRequest = NSBatchDeleteRequest(fetchRequest: fetchRequest)
do {
try myPersistentStoreCoordinator.execute(deleteRequest, with: myContext)
} catch let error as NSError {
// TODO: handle the error
}
Objective-C
NSFetchRequest *request = [[NSFetchRequest alloc] initWithEntityName:@"Car"];
NSBatchDeleteRequest *delete = [[NSBatchDeleteRequest alloc] initWithFetchRequest:request];
NSError *deleteError = nil;
[myPersistentStoreCoordinator executeRequest:delete withContext:myContext error:&deleteError];
More information about batch deletions can be found in the "What's New in Core Data" session from WWDC 2015 (starting at ~14:10).
iOS 8 and earlier:
Fetch 'em all and delete 'em all:
NSFetchRequest *allCars = [[NSFetchRequest alloc] init];
[allCars setEntity:[NSEntityDescription entityForName:@"Car" inManagedObjectContext:myContext]];
[allCars setIncludesPropertyValues:NO]; //only fetch the managedObjectID
NSError *error = nil;
NSArray *cars = [myContext executeFetchRequest:allCars error:&error];
[allCars release];
//error handling goes here
for (NSManagedObject *car in cars) {
[myContext deleteObject:car];
}
NSError *saveError = nil;
[myContext save:&saveError];
//more error handling here
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