I'm developing a quiz application. I have 100 questions. For example, what city is the capital of Great Britain?
A. Rome
B. Milan
C. London
D. Oslo
Which is the best solutions to store a data (coredata or sql)?
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Core Data is a bit more complex to set up than SQL, however in my opinion Core Data is MUCH easier to work with, and keeps you in "objective-c land" where as SQL requires writing tons of SQL statements (as far as I know). Specific to your use-case, I would think CoreData would be a better fit. You would probably have a Question object with an NSString text property for the actual question and then an NSArray of Answer objects. In CoreData/SQL speak, you would have a table of Questions with a text column. Each Question has a to-many relationship with a table of Answer objects (CoreData handles the dirty work for relationships, but in SQL you'd use primary keys). As I said in a comment on another answer below, because your database isn't very large and complex initially, you could package a plist or download one from a server to initially populate the CoreData database. Using CoreData instead of a plist means it's much easier to update values on the fly, so you can do things like have a property on each answer object that you can set if the user chooses that answer so you can save state between launches. Check out Core Data vs SQLite 3 and many other stack overflow answers that talk about the pros and cons of several different methods. |
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For a simple question/answer database with only 100 entries I would use a plain text file. It's simple to create, edit, and read. It's cross-platform should you ever want an Android or other version of your application. You could use XML, JSON, or a plist (as mentioned above) but why bother? Just alternate lines between questions and answers. Read in the file using [NSString stringWithContentsOfFile] and split up the lines into an array using [myFileContentString componentsSeparatedByString:@"\n"].
It's 1-2 lines of code and no learning curve. The odd entries in the array will be the questions and the even entries will be the answers. (Reading a plist requires only one line of code, which is nice, but they're harder to edit by hand and aren't simple to read on other platforms should you ever branch out) |
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You could also consider just using a .plist file with an array. Your data is not that complex (from what I understand), and plist makes for easy external maintaining/reading and updating via http. |
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