On Jan 18, 2013, at 09:48 , "Eric E. Dolecki" wrote:
> I have a UITapGestureRecognizer - when you touch, don't move for a bit &
> release, the tap still fires. Too long a time. I think it's around 0.35
> seconds. I'd love for that tap recognizer to be invalidated much quicker.
> Like half of that
On Fri, 18 Jan 2013 13:18:52 -0800, Sebastien Boisvert said:
>I'm trying to initialize a NSFileWrapper with an existing file which is
>about 3.65GB (gigs), then get the NSData by serializing it, but get the
>following exception:
>
>MyApp[81289:303] can't write int larger than INT_MAX
>MyApp[81289:
I'm trying to initialize a NSFileWrapper with an existing file which is about
3.65GB (gigs), then get the NSData by serializing it, but get the following
exception:
MyApp[81289:303] can't write int larger than INT_MAX
MyApp[81289:303] (
0 CoreFoundation 0x7fff8d4280a6 __exceptionPreproc
I have a UITapGestureRecognizer - when you touch, don't move for a bit &
release, the tap still fires. Too long a time. I think it's around 0.35
seconds. I'd love for that tap recognizer to be invalidated much quicker.
Like half of that. How can I accomplish this, or do I just need to roll my
own n
On Jan 18, 2013, at 2:24 AM, Rick Mann wrote:
> Some stuff I read online suggested it might be a clang bug. I considered the
> Xcode list, but figured since this was more in the language than the tool, I
> asked here. Perhaps by that reasoning, I should've at least posted there
> instead.
T
On 16 Jan 2013, at 17:40, Quincey Morris
wrote:
> On Jan 16, 2013, at 09:12 , "jonat...@mugginsoft.com"
> wrote:
>
>> To be honest I rarely remember to call -fileSystemRepresentation.
>> The docs seem to indicate that its only purpose is to replace abstract / and
>> . characters with OS equ
On Jan 18, 2013, at 2:18 , John McCall wrote:
> This is off-topic for this list, but since I'm here anyway, I'll answer. In
> the future, though, please take this to a venue that's more specific to C++.
Well, I am developing a Cocoa app, using Objective-C++ and clang (via Xcode). I
just sani
On Jan 18, 2013, at 1:28 AM, Rick Mann wrote:
> Can anyone explain this error? It sure looks to me like all the base class
> constructors are being explicitly called.
>
> http://pastebin.com/cVMmgqCZ
This is off-topic for this list, but since I'm here anyway, I'll answer. In
the future,
Okay, I've learned why it has to be this way, but it sure doesn't seem right to
me, especially when it's evident from the code (in this case) which constructor
to call.
--
Rick
On Jan 18, 2013, at 1:28 , Rick Mann wrote:
> Can anyone explain this error? It sure looks to me like all the base
Can anyone explain this error? It sure looks to me like all the base class
constructors are being explicitly called.
http://pastebin.com/cVMmgqCZ
$ clang Test.cpp
Test.cpp:40:5: error: constructor for 'E' must explicitly initialize the base
class 'C' which does not have a default const
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