Hi all
I am having trouble getting the master-detail binding configuration setup
correctly. I've sat down far too many hours
trying to debug this and I hope anyone can give me a hint on how to solve
this issue.
The full problem description can be found already at
http://stackoverflow.com/question
On 18 Jun, 2014, at 12:15 am, Todd Heberlein wrote:
>
> On Jun 16, 2014, at 8:35 PM, Roland King wrote:
>
>> My OSX app has an icon. It shows in the dock when active, it shows on
>> Alt-Tab, it shows in the Applications folder, however in Launchpad I get the
>> generic OSX Application Icon.
On 18 Jun 2014, at 12:04 am, Maxthon Chan wrote:
> moronically
:)
monotonically? But maybe both are true!
--Graham
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>
> On Jun 17, 2014, at 4:16 PM, Trygve Inda wrote:
>
>>> Doesn't seem weird to me, I do it all the time. One advantage of using a
>>> custom class over a dictionary is that the compiler knows what's expected of
>>> it, while a dictionary is just a black box.
>>>
>>>
>>> On Jun 17, 2014, at 3:2
On Jun 17, 2014, at 4:16 PM, Trygve Inda wrote:
>> Doesn't seem weird to me, I do it all the time. One advantage of using a
>> custom class over a dictionary is that the compiler knows what's expected of
>> it, while a dictionary is just a black box.
>>
>>
>> On Jun 17, 2014, at 3:21 PM, Trygve
> Doesn't seem weird to me, I do it all the time. One advantage of using a
> custom class over a dictionary is that the compiler knows what's expected of
> it, while a dictionary is just a black box.
>
>
> On Jun 17, 2014, at 3:21 PM, Trygve Inda wrote:
>
>> I need to store a large collection of
On Jun 17, 2014, at 15:21 , Trygve Inda wrote:
> Thoughts on the pros and cons of both methods?
I strongly agree with Lee Ann that the custom class is a better approach. It
almost always happens that you (eventually) want to associate behavior with the
properties. There can also be issues tryi
Doesn't seem weird to me, I do it all the time. One advantage of using a custom
class over a dictionary is that the compiler knows what's expected of it, while
a dictionary is just a black box.
On Jun 17, 2014, at 3:21 PM, Trygve Inda wrote:
> I need to store a large collection of settings (no
I need to store a large collection of settings (not application preferences,
but parameters describing how complex data is to be displayed) and am
looking for pros/cons as to the best way.
At the top I have a class called MySettings. Within this I need to have
groups of related settings. They can
I've got lots of crash like this below:
Thread : Crashed: com.apple.main-thread
0 ImageIO0x30c808fc vec_ycc_bgrx_convert + 427
1 ???0x27d440d0
2 ImageIO0x30c80707 sep_upsample + 170
3 ImageIO
On Jun 16, 2014, at 8:35 PM, Roland King wrote:
> My OSX app has an icon. It shows in the dock when active, it shows on
> Alt-Tab, it shows in the Applications folder, however in Launchpad I get the
> generic OSX Application Icon.
As the previous reply said, it might be a caching issue.
Tr
On Jun 17, 2014, at 5:36 AM, dangerwillrobinsondan...@gmail.com wrote:
>
> Try it after building after changing the bundle identifier.
> Then the OS will see it as a different app.
Try bumping the bundle version first. Often the bundle name can't be changed.
--Kyle Sluder
_
> On Jun 17, 2014, at 8:00 AM, Mike Abdullah wrote:
>
>
> On 17 Jun 2014, at 15:50, Sean McBride wrote:
>
>> On Tue, 17 Jun 2014 09:17:46 +0100, Mike Abdullah said:
>>
>>> I suspect the rationale might be “NSColor and NSImage live in AppKit,
>>> not Foundation, and the AppKit engineers aren’t
On 17 Jun 2014, at 15:50, Sean McBride wrote:
> On Tue, 17 Jun 2014 09:17:46 +0100, Mike Abdullah said:
>
>> I suspect the rationale might be “NSColor and NSImage live in AppKit,
>> not Foundation, and the AppKit engineers aren’t so bothered about secure
>> coding"
>
> That's a good theory. S
On Tue, 17 Jun 2014 09:17:46 +0100, Mike Abdullah said:
>I suspect the rationale might be “NSColor and NSImage live in AppKit,
>not Foundation, and the AppKit engineers aren’t so bothered about secure
>coding"
That's a good theory. So I just looked through Foundation and found numerous
other cl
Once again, you don’t need to perform the square root before comparing. It is a
waste of processor resource and not doing ti will not throw off comparison
(since mathematically, square root function is moronically increasing.)
On Jun 17, 2014, at 22:02, Jonathan Taylor
wrote:
> Thanks everyone
you may wish to look up ‘Delta E’. [what has this to do w/ cocoa?]
On Jun 17, 2014, at 9:29 AM, Maxthon Chan wrote:
> Alternatively I have an idea based on HSB colours: difference in hue in
> radians raised to 4th power (or 6th) plus squared Euclidean distance of
> saturation and brightness.
Thanks everyone. I had thought there might be a pre-existing API that would do
this (I was half expecting to find a method defined for the NSColorList
class...), but I will implement the euclidean distance test myself...
Cheers
Jonny.
On 17 Jun 2014, at 12:43, Maxthon Chan wrote:
> One easy-to
Alternatively I have an idea based on HSB colours: difference in hue in radians
raised to 4th power (or 6th) plus squared Euclidean distance of saturation and
brightness.
On Jun 17, 2014, at 21:22, Torsten Curdt wrote:
> RGB is not perceptually uniform, hence the Euclidean distance is not qui
I know, it is just sqared Euclidean distance is simplest to calculate. Sure you
can, for example, add coefficients to the formula, to adjust.
On Jun 17, 2014, at 21:22, Torsten Curdt wrote:
> RGB is not perceptually uniform, hence the Euclidean distance is not quite
> right.
> Wikipedia and St
RGB is not perceptually uniform, hence the Euclidean distance is not quite
right.
Wikipedia and Stackoverflow has more information on this:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_difference
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/9018016/how-to-compare-two-colors
cheers,
Torsten
__
On Jun 17, 2014, at 7:14 AM, Mills, Steve wrote:
> The algorithm I've seen then takes the square root of that value.
If the square root of a is larger than the square root of b, then a is larger
than b ;-)
(In this case a & b will both be positive.)
--
Scott Ribe
scott_r...@elevated-dev.com
Square rooting is slow, and not calculating square root do not throw off
comparison.
On Jun 17, 2014, at 21:14, Mills, Steve wrote:
> On Jun 17, 2014, at 06:43:54, Maxthon Chan wrote:
>
>> One easy-to-implement method: colour cube.
>>
>> Define a colour using its RGB values as a 3-tuple (r,
On Jun 17, 2014, at 06:43:54, Maxthon Chan wrote:
> One easy-to-implement method: colour cube.
>
> Define a colour using its RGB values as a 3-tuple (r, g, b) and standard
> colours (ri, gi, bi) (where i = 0..n).The square distance between the given
> colour and a standard colour is (ri-r)^2+(
Try it after building after changing the bundle identifier.
Then the OS will see it as a different app.
Sent from my iPhone
> On 2014/06/17, at 21:19, Roland King wrote:
>
> Applications for the Launchpad, it was not, then re-installed it from the
> installer which put it back in Applicatio
On 17 Jun, 2014, at 8:06 pm, Uli Kusterer wrote:
> On 17 Jun 2014, at 10:55, Jean-Daniel Dupas wrote:
>> That's probably a Launchpad icon caching issue. I don't know where it used
>> to cache icons though.
>
> I’ve seen such issues with beta versions of Mac OS that are out there right
> now.
On 17 Jun 2014, at 9:33 am, Sean McBride wrote:
> NSImage support only NSCoding
You don't want to be archiving NSImage objects if you can help it, FWIW. Some
variants don't even support it, like the one you get from the IKPictureTaker.
--Graham
On 17 Jun 2014, at 10:55, Jean-Daniel Dupas wrote:
> That's probably a Launchpad icon caching issue. I don't know where it used to
> cache icons though.
I’ve seen such issues with beta versions of Mac OS that are out there right
now. That wouldn’t be the case for you, would it? I also occasion
On 17 Jun 2014, at 11:36, Maxthon Chan wrote:
> Personal suggestion, convert colors to strings (you can use any format, but I
> prefer #RRGGBB., drop the . for opaque color, which is compact and
> easily understood by humans) and images to PNG data (lossless), then archive.
Probably be
One easy-to-implement method: colour cube.
Define a colour using its RGB values as a 3-tuple (r, g, b) and standard
colours (ri, gi, bi) (where i = 0..n).The square distance between the given
colour and a standard colour is (ri-r)^2+(gi-g)^2+(bi-b)^2. You can calculate
square distances between
Hi all,
Is there a way of identifying the closest match to a given NSColor, out of a
list of possible colors to match? The user could have selected any color using
the color picker, but I would like to know whether it is "approximately red",
green, blue or white.
Of course, it might be e.g. ma
Personal suggestion, convert colors to strings (you can use any format, but I
prefer #RRGGBB., drop the . for opaque color, which is compact and
easily understood by humans) and images to PNG data (lossless), then archive.
On Jun 17, 2014, at 17:30, Greg Weston wrote:
> Sean McBride wo
Sean McBride wonders:
> I was modernizing some of my code to support NSSecureCoding instead of just
> NSCoding and stumbled upon that fact that NSColor and NSImage support only
> NSCoding and not NSSecureCoding. Whereas NSURL, NSData, NSArray and
> countless others now support NSSecureCoding.
That's probably a Launchpad icon caching issue. I don't know where it used to
cache icons though.
Le 17 juin 2014 à 05:35, Roland King a écrit :
> My OSX app has an icon. It shows in the dock when active, it shows on
> Alt-Tab, it shows in the Applications folder, however in Launchpad I get th
On 17 Jun 2014, at 01:33, Sean McBride wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I was modernizing some of my code to support NSSecureCoding instead of just
> NSCoding and stumbled upon that fact that NSColor and NSImage support only
> NSCoding and not NSSecureCoding. Whereas NSURL, NSData, NSArray and
> countl
On 17 Jun 2014, at 00:33, Sean McBride wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I was modernizing some of my code to support NSSecureCoding instead of just
> NSCoding and stumbled upon that fact that NSColor and NSImage support only
> NSCoding and not NSSecureCoding. Whereas NSURL, NSData, NSArray and
> countl
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