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Suppose I have an arbitrary set of files included in the Main App Bundle. I would like to fetch the file URLs for those at launch and store them somewhere. Is this possible using NSFileManager? The documentation is unclear in that regard.

Note: I only need the file URLs, I do not need to access the actual files.

Andrew Lauer Barinov
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4 Answers4

68

You can get the URL of a file in the main bundle using

NSString *path = [[NSBundle mainBundle] pathForResource:@"SomeFile" ofType:@"jpeg"];
NSURL *url = [NSURL fileURLWithPath:path];

You can write this URL to, for example, a property list file in the Documents directory:

NSString *docsDir = [NSSearchForDirectoriesInDomains(NSDocumentsDirectory, NSUserDomainMask, YES) objectAtIndex:0];
NSString *plistPath = [docsDir stringByAppendingPathComponent:@"Files.plist"];
NSDictionary *dict = [NSDictionary dictionaryWithObjectsAndKeys:[url absoluteString] forKey:@"SomeFile.jpeg"];
[dict writeToFile:plistPath atomically:YES];

If you don't know the names of the files and you just want to list all the files in the bundle, use

NSArray *files = [[NSFileManager defaultManager] contentsOfDirectoryAtPath:[[NSBundle mainBundle] bundlePath] error:NULL];
for (NSString *fileName in files) {
    NSString *path = [[NSBundle mainBundle] pathForResource:fileName ofType:nil];
    NSURL *url = [NSURL fileURLWithPath:path];
    // do something with `url`
}
6

Or in Swift 4:

        let url = Bundle.main.url(forResource: "FileName", withExtension: ".xyz")
Bersaelor
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    to use this, where should I save my file?? Do I also need to include the file to the project? – user3390652 Sep 30 '18 at 15:59
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    @user3390652 your file needs to be added to the project and part of the target. All files that have the checkmark for the target will be available as part of the main bundle. – Bersaelor Oct 11 '18 at 10:32
3

Yes, you would get their path:

NSString *path = [NSBundle mainBundle] pathForResource:@"file1" ofType:@"png"];
NSURL *fileURL = [NSURL fileURLWithPath:path]

// save it as any other object or in a dictionary:

[myMutableDictionary setObject:fileURL forKey:@"file1.png"];

EDIT: to get the complete list of files, use the NSFileManager, get the path to the bundle itself, then walk each directory getting the files, making URLs, and saving them somewhere. There is oodles of code on SO how to walk a directory to do this. [You should update your question to be more specific on what you want, this was not made clear at all originally]

Cimbali
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David H
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1

There's an API on NSBundle (documentation) available on 10.6 or iOS 4 to get an NSURL directly, rather than passing a path to the NSURL constructor:

- (NSURL *)URLForResource:(NSString *)name withExtension:(NSString *)ext;

It also has variants that take a subdirectory and localizationName, the same as its -pathForResource: equivalents.

Dov
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