On 10 Sep 2014, at 3:43 pm, Rick C. wrote:
> Thanks for the help. So I have double-checked and the info in question that
> is not sticking is NSString/NSData being written:
>
> [[NSUserDefaults standardUserDefaults] setObject:stringObject
> forKey:@“MyStringKey”];
> [[NSUserDefaults standard
Are you calling synchronise too when you're writing?
[[NSUserDefault standardUserDefaults] synchronise]
Verstuurd vanaf mijn iPhone
> Op 10 sep. 2014 om 07:43 heeft "Rick C." het volgende
> geschreven:
>
> Thanks for the help. So I have double-checked and the info in question that
> is no
Thanks for the help. So I have double-checked and the info in question that is
not sticking is NSString/NSData being written:
[[NSUserDefaults standardUserDefaults] setObject:stringObject
forKey:@“MyStringKey”];
[[NSUserDefaults standardUserDefaults] setObject:dataObject
forKey:@“MyDataKey”];
> On Sep 9, 2014, at 6:09 PM, Rick Mann wrote:
>
> The debugger stops at the main entry point with this useless stack.
Come on; it's not "useless", you just have to look carefully. Cocoa APIs are so
verbose that backtraces often read pretty easily.
> #20x023b2d5e in -[NSObject(NSKeyValueC
On 10 Sep 2014, at 10:45 am, Charles Jenkins wrote:
> Then I deleted the left side’s empty custom view object and replaced it with
> a Source View. I deleted the right side’s empty custom view object and
> replaced it with one of the text view objects.
FWIW, and this is unrelated to your probl
On Sep 9, 2014, at 17:45 , Charles Jenkins wrote:
> My question is: assuming that my Document class is indeed acting as the
> outline view’s delegate, which of these graphical objects is supposed to be
> the one calling outlineView:objectForTableColumn:byItem:?
That’s a data source method, not
> On Sep 9, 2014, at 6:09 PM, Rick Mann wrote:
>
> I downloaded Xcode 6 GM and rebuilt my app. Running in the 7.1 or 8.0
> simulator, it crashes when attempting to present a modal view controller that
> worked fine when built with 5.1.1. The debugger stops at the main entry point
> with this
I downloaded Xcode 6 GM and rebuilt my app. Running in the 7.1 or 8.0
simulator, it crashes when attempting to present a modal view controller that
worked fine when built with 5.1.1. The debugger stops at the main entry point
with this useless stack. Attempting to continue results in a SIGABRT.
Also I have a fundamental question about the objects I get when I drag a Source
View onto a window. I built my UI by dragging a vertical splitter onto the
empty window. Then I deleted the left side’s empty custom view object and
replaced it with a Source View. I deleted the right side’s empty cu
Quincey,
Thanks for the reply.
At the time of my original posting I had verified several times that all the
protocol functions got called and were returning the values I expected them to
return. The objectValueForTableColumn one was returning a String, the title I
hoped would appear in the o
On Tue, Sep 9, 2014, at 06:42 PM, Graham Cox wrote:
>
> On 10 Sep 2014, at 7:13 am, Luc Van Bogaert
> wrote:
>
> > This opens the panel without making it key, which is OK, but it still makes
> > the panel key when I click any of the responder objects in the panel, such
> > as a collectionview.
On 10 Sep 2014, at 7:13 am, Luc Van Bogaert wrote:
> This opens the panel without making it key, which is OK, but it still makes
> the panel key when I click any of the responder objects in the panel, such as
> a collectionview...
'becomesKeyOnlyIfNeeded' does what it says, but how does it de
Hi,
I am implementing some kind of Tools Panel for my document based application
and I'm wondering how one could copy the standard Color Panel behaviour with
respect to its key status.
The Color Panel can be displayed without becoming the key window, it let's the
user use the various controls
I have a UITableViewCell with several stacked UILabels:
- label1: set to 1 line, height = single line height, fixed bottom spacing
- label2: set to 2 lines, height ≥ single line height, fixed bottom spacing
- label3: set to 0 lines, height ≥ single line height, bottom spacing ≥ min
spacing
The l
On Sep 9, 2014, at 04:16 , Charles Jenkins wrote:
> Actually, if there is a space between the underscore and the name, Xcode
> presents a warning saying it’s extraneous. I cut and pasted the original
> prototypes from the documentation in order to avoid typos, and Xcode
> immediately displayed
> On 9 Sep 2014, at 7:16 pm, Charles Jenkins wrote:
>
> Quincey,
>
>
>
> Move my breakpoint up to the function declaration to see if it’s really being
> called
> Reinsert the space after the underscore and ignore Xcode’s warnings
> Delete the underscore altogether
>
>
You don’t want a spa
Quincey,
Actually, if there is a space between the underscore and the name, Xcode
presents a warning saying it’s extraneous. I cut and pasted the original
prototypes from the documentation in order to avoid typos, and Xcode
immediately displayed warning messages. Removing the space made Xcode h
17 matches
Mail list logo