On Oct 19, 2013, at 9:27 AM, Jerry Krinock wrote:
>> I don't know if this is a common technique but I use it regularly to track
>> binding changes.
>>
>> - (void)setValue:(id)value forKeyPath:(NSString *)keyPath
>> {
>> // all bindings that reference self (such as self.representedObject.xxx)
>> // will pass through this method
>> if ([keyPath rangeOfString:@"self.representedObject."].location !=
>> NSNotFound) {
>> [self.document updateChangeCount:NSChangeDone];
>> }
>> [super setValue:value forKeyPath:keyPath];
>> }
>
> That's interesting and I've never seen it done.
>
> I'd call it a variation of writing custom accessors for each attribute.
> Custom accessors for each attribute have the advantage of reliably catching
> all model changes, not just those driven by Cocoa Bindings. But your
> technique is way less code, by a factor of the number of attributes, and
> requires zero maintenance.
I've done it / do it in one particular project in one spot out of notable
convenience. It works, but only for modifications using KVC, and I do recall
having at least one bug where a modification wasn't using KVC and wasn't
triggering the code I was expecting it to.
I gag a little whenever I remember that's how it works, but at this point it
ain't broke so I'm not going to tempt fate by fixing it. ;-)
--
Seth Willits
_______________________________________________
Cocoa-dev mailing list ([email protected])
Please do not post admin requests or moderator comments to the list.
Contact the moderators at cocoa-dev-admins(at)lists.apple.com
Help/Unsubscribe/Update your Subscription:
https://lists.apple.com/mailman/options/cocoa-dev/archive%40mail-archive.com
This email sent to [email protected]