Hello, all ...
I'm using NSInvocation so I can pass multiple arguments to delegate methods.
However, I also want these delegate methods to get called on the main thread.
Is there a way that I can use NSInvocation to call the method it wraps on the
main thread, like performSelectorOnMainThread?
> id obj;
> if (.)
> obj = [Class1 alloc];
> else
> obj = [Class2 alloc];
> obj = [obj initWithFoo: bar:];
--
Scott Ribe
scott_r...@killerbytes.com
http://www.killerbytes.com/
(303) 722-0567 voice
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On Feb 10, 2010, at 12:23 PM, James Walker wrote:
> I think at times I've written things like [[NSMutableArray alloc] init] with
> no apparent ill effects, but now I notice that the docs for NSMutableArray
> and NSArray don't say that there is an init method. The NSObject docs say
> that an in
well here's what the documentation has to say about the backBarButtonItem
property you are trying to set.
When this item is the back item of the navigation bar—when it is the next item
below the top item—it may be represented as a back button on the navigation
bar. Use this property to specify
True.
But most classes have designated initializers that configure the class
properly. They should be documented, although typically they’re used for
subclassing the class.
On Feb 10, 2010, at 3:49 PM, Henry McGilton (Boulevardier) wrote:
>
> On Feb 10, 2010, at 12:23 PM, James Walker wrote:
Is there any way to add support for the normal Cocoa Find functionality in a
WebKit view?
Failing that, is there any other way to get search functionality in a WebKit
view? I want to do some in-app documentation, and Apple's Help system is so
bad I've finally given up on that (floating window!
You’re correct. This isn’t relevant to development. And as a result it doesn’t
belong here.
Perhaps the xcode-users list might be more appropriate.
On Feb 10, 2010, at 4:28 AM, Tharindu Madushanka wrote:
> This may not relevant to development directly but I could not find an answer
> for this
On Feb 10, 2010, at 4:38 PM, Jason Bobier wrote:
> This idea came about because I was annoyed at having to do it again and
> realized that everything that I wanted to store was NSCoding compliant, which
> means that it should be archivable. It appears that some of the NSCoding
> compliant objec
> You can do this using Key Value Coding, specifically using the collection
> operators like @distinctUnionOfSets etc.
>
> -Steven
>
>
> On Wed, Feb 10, 2010 at 9:11 PM, Jens Alfke wrote:
>
>>
>> On Feb 10, 2010, at 1:45 PM, Trygve Inda wrote:
>>
>>> iTunes seems to do this with the column b
Marc van Olmen will give a talk entitled "Introduction to NSOperation".
As usual:
(1) Please feel free to bring questions, code, and works in progress.
We have a projector and we like to see code and try to help.
(2) We'll have food and beer afterwards.
(3) If there's a topic you'd like prese
On 2010 Feb 10, at 18:05, Jens Alfke wrote:
>> I've always wondered if I insert a managed object, then later fetch it
>> repeatedly from the same managed object context, do I get the same object
>> every time?
>
> Yes, basically. There is only going to be one in-memory object at a time that
>
You can do this using Key Value Coding, specifically using the collection
operators like @distinctUnionOfSets etc.
-Steven
On Wed, Feb 10, 2010 at 9:11 PM, Jens Alfke wrote:
>
> On Feb 10, 2010, at 1:45 PM, Trygve Inda wrote:
>
> > iTunes seems to do this with the column browser... Eg when you
On Feb 10, 2010, at 1:45 PM, Trygve Inda wrote:
> iTunes seems to do this with the column browser... Eg when you select
> "Classic Rock", it pulls up a list of Artists without duplicates in the
> list... And does it very fast.
But keep in mind that iTunes is a Carbon app, not Cocoa.
> It seems
On Feb 10, 2010, at 4:44 PM, Jerry Krinock wrote:
> I've always wondered if I insert a managed object, then later fetch it
> repeatedly from the same managed object context, do I get the same object
> every time?
Yes, basically. There is only going to be one in-memory object at a time that
re
On 11/02/2010, at 11:55 AM, Angelo Chen wrote:
> I have a NSTextField outlet, and I'd like to limit the input to:
> 1) only upper case alpha characters2) must be two characters
> Any idea how to achieve this? Thanks,
Make a custom subclass of NSFormatter and attach it to the field.
--Graham
Hi,
I have a NSTextField outlet, and I'd like to limit the input to:
1) only upper case alpha characters2) must be two characters
Any idea how to achieve this? Thanks,
Angelo
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Still working on this and still getting nowhere, so another question:
Is there a way to prevent NSXMLElement converting '&' into '&' so that I can
resolve character entities myself in my own NSXMLElement category -init...
method?
To recap the problem, the NSXML classes change '<' into '<' and '
I've always wondered if I insert a managed object, then later fetch it
repeatedly from the same managed object context, do I get the same object every
time? (Assume that there is only one object which matches the given
predicate.) This may be important if I want to, say, set an instance variab
Hey Ricky,
I'm strictly attempting to archive the controllers and views hierarchy starting
from the navcontroller. My data model is quite separate from all of this.
I've often done similar things to what you recommend, but complex interfaces
often include tab controllers, nav controllers, modal
Peter,
Yeah, but I get no NSException when I press the back button -- it does what
it's always done (which I want). Also, I added the colon and it still doesn't
even try to call my selector.
In short, it works -- but i'm not sure _why_ it works.
Regards,
John
> your selector is missing colo
I have a table view with 4 columns, connected to a conventional datasource. The
first 3 columns are fully set up in IB to have text field cells with attached
number formatters. The 4th column has a variable data type where the user
indirectly chooses a data type and the code dynamically sets the
Yes, you have to account for any references into the unarchived graph that
objects not included in the graph hold. In my case, this should be as simple as
removing the navcontroller view from it's superview.
Jason
On Feb 10, 2010, at 4:19 PM, Kyle Sluder wrote:
> On Wed, Feb 10, 2010 at 12:54
Hi John,
your selector is missing colon:
@selector(back:)
for method:
-(IBAction)back:(id)sender
hth,
regards,
Peter Blazejewicz
On Thu, Feb 11, 2010 at 1:10 AM, John Michael Zorko wrote:
>
> Hello, all ...
>
> I've a question about the UINavigationController backBarButtonItem property.
> I
Hello, all ...
I've a question about the UINavigationController backBarButtonItem property. I
wanted to merely set my own image for the back button, instead of it using the
title of the controller above in the hierarchy. So, this is what I did (yes
this app is using Three20, but I don't think
On Feb 10, 2010, at 12:40 PM, Jason Bobier wrote:
> As many of you know, saving and restoring complex navigation hierarchies on
> the iPhone can be a real chore. So, I had this brilliant idea of setting up
> my app delegate like this:
>
> applicationDidFinishLaunching
> if userdefaults c
I have an array of Dicts with two fields in each (for example)
Name and City
Given a Name, I'd like to find all unique Cities or vis-versa.
iTunes seems to do this with the column browser... Eg when you select
"Classic Rock", it pulls up a list of Artists without duplicates in the
list... And d
On Wed, Feb 10, 2010 at 12:54 PM, Jason Bobier wrote:
> All of these are NSCoding compliant, which means that if I archive it, I
> should be able to unarchive it and get the exact state back (subject to
> conditional archiving, etc...) as long as I archive a complete object graph.
Not true. You
For this use case you can also use the fact that classes are objects.
Something like the following:
Class theClass = nil;
if (.)
theClass = [Class1 class];
else
theClass = [Class2 class];
id obj = [[theClass alloc] initWithFoo:
This is separate from my model. This is the restoration of the view and
controller hierarchy that is expected of iPhone apps when they startup.
Restoring this can be incredibly complex when you have lots of view controllers
including nav controllers, tab bar controllers, and modal controllers al
On Feb 10, 2010, at 12:23 PM, James Walker wrote:
> I think at times I've written things like [[NSMutableArray alloc] init] with
> no apparent ill effects, but now I notice that the docs for NSMutableArray
> and NSArray don't say that there is an init method. The NSObject docs say
> that an i
I think at times I've written things like [[NSMutableArray alloc] init]
with no apparent ill effects, but now I notice that the docs for
NSMutableArray and NSArray don't say that there is an init method. The
NSObject docs say that an init method might raise an exception. Is
there some other i
On Feb 10, 2010, at 12:03 PM, Trygve Inda wrote:
> Once the files are processed by the sub app, I need to send a properties
> NSDictionary back to the main app. This can't really be handled by an 'odoc'
> event -
Any AppleEvent can send a reply containing structured data. Although you're
right
On Feb 10, 2010, at 10:40 AM, Jason Bobier wrote:
> In theory, the archived navcontroller should contain my complex view
> controller hierarchy and all of the related views, so this should work.
> However, when I unarchive and add to view to the window, the subviews rarely
> have all of their v
On Feb 10, 2010, at 5:27 AM, Giannandrea Castaldi wrote:
> I would like to alloc an object and defer the initialization to
> another object, is a good practice? The reason is that I can alloc
> several types of objects but the init method have the same signature.
It's unusual, but I've done it o
>
> On Feb 9, 2010, at 10:47 PM, Trygve Inda wrote:
>
>> 1) Apple Events... These are messy but I'd go there if it'd not have lost
>> events.
>
> Bingo. This is a really typical use case. The 'odoc' AppleEvent does exactly
> what you want. Just use NSWorkspace or LaunchServices to tell the other
On Wed, Feb 10, 2010 at 9:26 AM, Matthew Miller wrote:
> @property (nonatomic, retain) NSDate *DateOfBirth;
> @property (nonatomic, retain) NSString *FirstName;
> @property (nonatomic, retain) NSString *LastName;
> @property (nonatomic, retain) NSNumber *DraftClass;
> @property (nonatomic, retain)
On Wed, Feb 10, 2010 at 5:27 AM, Giannandrea Castaldi
wrote:
> I would like to alloc an object and defer the initialization to
> another object, is a good practice? The reason is that I can alloc
> several types of objects but the init method have the same signature.
No. You must always do [[Foo
There is at least one iPhone example that users the URL Loading System with
NSOperation.
On Feb 9, 2010, at 4:12 PM, Laurent Daudelin wrote:
> I'm trying to run an NSURLConnection from an NSOperation. Apparently, it
> won't run. I know that NSURLConnection need a run loop. Does that mean I'll
As many of you know, saving and restoring complex navigation hierarchies on the
iPhone can be a real chore. So, I had this brilliant idea of setting up my app
delegate like this:
applicationDidFinishLaunching
if userdefaults contains an archived navcontroller
unarchive co
I'm having trouble with a Cocoa app built around an NSManagedObject model.
Without getting too far into the weeds, there is a Player object:
@class Program;
@interface Player : NSManagedObject {
}
@property (nonatomic, retain) NSDate *DateOfBirth;
@property (nonatomic, retain) NSString *FirstN
Hi,
I would like to alloc an object and defer the initialization to
another object, is a good practice? The reason is that I can alloc
several types of objects but the init method have the same signature.
Thanks.
Jean
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On Wed, Feb 10, 2010 at 1:28 AM, Tharindu Madushanka
wrote:
> This may not relevant to development directly but I could not find an answer
> for this over web.. may be someone experienced the same could help me here..
Tools questions belong on the xcode-users list.
--Kyle Sluder
On Wed, Feb 10, 2010 at 11:45 AM, Richard Somers
wrote:
> On Feb 10, 2010, at 2:28 AM, Tharindu Madushanka wrote:
>
>> Is there any way I could resume a broken XCode download due to session
>> expire..
>
> I also have a slow connection. I have never been able to resume a broken
> XCode download. T
On Feb 9, 2010, at 10:47 PM, Trygve Inda wrote:
> 1) Apple Events... These are messy but I'd go there if it'd not have lost
> events.
Bingo. This is a really typical use case. The 'odoc' AppleEvent does exactly
what you want. Just use NSWorkspace or LaunchServices to tell the other app to
ope
My problem is that my ISPs use long-haul WiFi links that seem to go down fairly
regularly (which is why I keep redundant ISPs). This make multi-hour downloads
occasionally frustrating.
Todd
On Feb 10, 2010, at 9:00 AM, Philip Ershler wrote:
>
> On Feb 10, 2010, at 9:45 AM, Richard Somers wrot
On Feb 10, 2010, at 9:45 AM, Richard Somers wrote:
> On Feb 10, 2010, at 2:28 AM, Tharindu Madushanka wrote:
>
>> Is there any way I could resume a broken XCode download due to session
>> expire..
>
> I also have a slow connection. I have never been able to resume a broken
> XCode download. T
On 2010 Feb 10, at 01:43, Greg Reichow wrote:
> the things you learn by posting a bad answer.
-sendSynchronousRequest: is not necessarily a bad answer, Greg. In some
situations it is adequate, and then it is the correct choice due to its
simplicity.
__
On Feb 10, 2010, at 2:28 AM, Tharindu Madushanka wrote:
Is there any way I could resume a broken XCode download due to
session expire..
I also have a slow connection. I have never been able to resume a
broken XCode download. The only solution I have found is making sure
your computer stay
On Feb 10, 2010, at 5:52 AM, Kai Brüning wrote:
> Could somebody with insight confirm whether this is a documentation bug?
This is indeed an error in the documentation. Please file a bug against the
documentation with the information you have provided.
Douglas Davidson
Hi,
Just to follow up on this as I'm still having problems have done some more
testing and double-checked the XML specs.
Yet again it seems that the NSXML classes are better at validating invalid XML
when opening documents than when generating XML data. If you include the string
"]]>" inside t
Hi,
Apple’s documentation states about -[NSBundle preferredLocalizations]: "The
localizations in the array are not returned in any particular order."
This makes no sense, I’d expect this to be true for -[NSBundle localizations],
why I’d expect -[NSBundle preferredLocalizations] to be implemente
hi
I am currently working on a Cocoa Application in which i pop up an
authorisation window using AuthorizationCreate . if the user has not responded
to it with a time say 60 seconds , i want to cancel/timeout the pop up window
created by above authorisationCreate . how can i cancel / tim
>>> I'm trying to run an NSURLConnection from an NSOperation. Apparently, it
>>> won't run. I know that NSURLConnection need a run loop. Does that mean I'll
>>> have to setup some kind of NSTime in my NSOperation and then call my run
>>> loop at regular intervals?
>>
>> Try using the synchrono
Hi,
This may not relevant to development directly but I could not find an answer
for this over web.. may be someone experienced the same could help me here..
I have an internet connection with speed around 50-60kbps.. Last time it
nearly took 12 hours to download the full iPhone SDK with 2.x Gig.
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