Ah! Exactly what I needed. Works. Thank you. It turns out that I had
another borderless window where I had done just that. How quickly we
forget.
That screen overlay business is a real nasty. I found out real fast that
you don¹t put a break point in its result handler unless you like cold
reb
On Oct 4, 2012, at 3:17 PM, Gordon Apple wrote:
> This is essentially the DragMouseBoxView (simple subclass of NSView) from
> the AVScreenShack sample. It is set to acceptFirstResponder and
> acceptFirstMouseClick.
You may need to override -canBecomeKeyWindow in your window to return YES — if
On 4 Oct 2012, at 20:18, Marshall Houskeeper wrote:
> Hi Mike,
>
> Our products are a video/audio editor application and video effect plugins.
> In both cases, our file formats (data block for plugin data) can store many
> file references. Our files keep references to file types such as
I have a screen overlay window/view (one for each available screen) which
accepts mouse events (up, down, dragged). I want the user to be able to
cancel and dismiss the overlay window(s) by hitting the ³any² key (old MS
joke). Unfortunately, overriding keyDown/keyUp does not work. I just get a
s
On Oct 4, 2012, at 10:12 AM, Jerry Krinock wrote:
> If I create such an error on my Mac, where backtrace() has the benefit of
> either an unstripped Debug build or a matching dSYM file, the backtrace is
> symbolized correctly.
If you have the matching dSYM file for your users' bug reports, you
On 2012 Oct 04, at 11:07, Fritz Anderson wrote:
> If symbols are not present in the executable, the trace will search backwards
> in memory to the closest symbol that happens to be defined.
Thank you, Fritz. It seems like the backtracer should have a way to avoid
presenting incorrect informa
Hi Mike,
Our products are a video/audio editor application and video effect plugins.
In both cases, our file formats (data block for plugin data) can store many
file references. Our files keep references to file types such as quicktime
movies, audio files and text files as well as links to
I seem to have gotten an uptick of HTTP Too many Redirects. I don't know if its
yet iOS 6 or just so many people upgrading that the servers are wonky (Google
API servers we use mostly).
On Oct 3, 2012, at 6:23 PM, Laurent Daudelin wrote:
> Anybody extensively using NSURLConnection seeing more
Hi,
I would like to make sure I understand what has been happening in some part of
our application.
The code is really easy. The idea is to "flash" an NSButton.
The NSButton subclass sets its properties to selected, draws itself into a
NSBitmapImageRep, resets its selected property, and create
On 4 Oct 2012, at 12:12 PM, Jerry Krinock wrote:
> 1 MyFramework 0x00105066 MyInlineFunction + 188607
...
> If I create such an error on my Mac, where backtrace() has the benefit of
> either an unstripped Debug build or a matching dSYM file, the backtrace is
> symbolized correctly.
...
> Wha
A 32-bit Cocoa Mac app is a thin wrapper around a 32-bit framework. I've
received a dozen or so crash reports from users during the last year which
start something like this…
1 MyFramework 0x00105066 MyInlineFunction + 188607
2 MyFramework 0x0001d8be MyFramework + 96446
3 MyFramework
On 3 Oct 2012, at 22:02, Marshall Houskeeper wrote:
>
> Hi Quincey,
>
> I have no problem with the use of the open panel ( security-scoped bookmark
> )for creating new documents. The problem is for pre sandboxed documents or
> documents that come from Windows. Having the user re-authorize
On 3 Oct 2012, at 21:34, Quincey Morris
wrote:
> On Oct 3, 2012, at 12:44 , Marshall Houskeeper
> wrote:
>
>> Our plan is to use Security-Scoped Bookmarks for all new documents to store
>> external file references when we go to the sandbox environment. In our use
>> case, I would guess
On 3 Oct 2012, at 19:48, Sean McBride wrote:
> On Wed, 3 Oct 2012 11:38:10 -0700, Quincey Morris said:
>
>> If an item is in your sandbox, you don't need the bookmark at all (for
>> security reasons, anyway). If the item is *not* in your sandbox, then
>> you're going to have to ask the user for
On 3 Oct 2012, at 18:18, Sean McBride wrote:
> On Wed, 3 Oct 2012 11:15:48 -0400, Marshall Houskeeper said:
>
>> Our document file format currently stores file paths and file alias to
>> external files. We can potentially have several thousand references to
>> external files stored in a documen
On Sun, 30 Sep 2012 10:03:33 -0500, Fritz Anderson
said:
>On 30 Sep 2012, at 3:28 AM, "Kiran K . Koduri"
>wrote:
>
>> I am new to iOS, my qusetion is if i compile my application on iOS 4.2, thus
>> this application works on iphone or ipad with iOS 6.
>
>The short answer is yes
But the long an
On 3 Oct 2012, at 16:15, Marshall Houskeeper wrote:
>
> Our document file format currently stores file paths and file alias to
> external files. We can potentially have several thousand references to
> external files stored in a document. When we move to a sandbox environment,
> we will stor
On Sat, 29 Sep 2012 17:52:23 -0400, Eric Gorr said:
>I am trying to wrap my head around the auto-layout functionality.
There are at least three (count them three) WWDC 2012 videos about this, and I
strongly recommend that you touch *nothing* until you have watched all of them.
m.
--
matt neubu
On 4 Oct 2012, at 12:33 AM, Rick Mann wrote:
> On Oct 3, 2012, at 19:46 , Jeff Kelley wrote:
>
>> It’s relatively simple: App A registers for a URL scheme, let’s say AppA://.
>> App B asks the system if it knows how to handle AppA:// links.
>
> I was looking for how this is done. How does an
On 01/10/2012, at 10:52 AM, Shane Stanley wrote:
> I have a GC app with a deployment version of 10.6. If I compile it in 4.5
> under OS X 10.8, using either 10.8 or 10.7 SDK, and run the resulting app in
> OS X 10.6, I gets lots of this sort of error:
>
> objc[201]: GC: 0x10029cf20 + 24 isn't
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