On 12/01/2016 14:08, Eden Smallwood wrote:
On 11/01/2016 18:44, Motti Shneor wrote:
You want the Even Better Authorization Sample Code rather than SMJobBless.
John
I don't think he does.
The E. B. A. S. C. relies on AEWP, which is utterly, hopelessly,
unspeakably deprecated.
> On 11/01/2016 18:44, Motti Shneor wrote:
> You want the Even Better Authorization Sample Code rather than SMJobBless.
>
> John
I don't think he does.
The E. B. A. S. C. relies on AEWP, which is utterly, hopelessly,
unspeakably deprecated.
He does in fact want to use
> (I also don’t want to restart Xcode wars, but I do actually believe that the
> unified window style that arrived in Xcode 4 was an actual decision about
> which worked best, made by clever people who actually thought about it. It
> wasn’t — I believe — merely clueless. I also want to point out
> On Jan 11, 2016, at 17:24 , David Duncan wrote:
>
>
>> On Jan 11, 2016, at 3:53 PM, Rick Mann wrote:
>>
>> I have a UIButton subclass that does a lot of complex state changing, either
>> replacing its image or drawing progress into itself. The images look like
>> typical iOS 7+ icons, lit
> On Jan 11, 2016, at 3:53 PM, Rick Mann wrote:
>
> I have a UIButton subclass that does a lot of complex state changing, either
> replacing its image or drawing progress into itself. The images look like
> typical iOS 7+ icons, little blue outlines of things.
>
> This worked well in the regu
> On Jan 11, 2016, at 10:18 AM, Dave wrote:
>
> Any one have any other techniques for telling if a CFTypeRef has changed?
No, in general there is no way. You’d have to make a copy of the object, keep
that around, and then later call CFEqual on the current object and the copy …
except that (a)
I have a UIButton subclass that does a lot of complex state changing, either
replacing its image or drawing progress into itself. The images look like
typical iOS 7+ icons, little blue outlines of things.
This worked well in the regular view hierarchy, but now I need to add one to at
UINavigati
My favorite thing in Xcode is the way that Interface Builder stuffs the entire
object library into that tiny little space in the lower-right corner of the
screen. Way back in Xcode 3 (or whenever it was that IB was a separate app),
the floating palette that they had for the object library let yo
> My reasoning is that if you make it inflexible, you risk getting (say) 50%
> lovers and 50% haters. If you make it flexible, you risk getting 40% lovers
> and 40% haters, and 20% people who are annoyed because it’s too flexible or
> too complicated. That’s a net loss in satisfaction.
I think
> If you make it flexible, you risk getting 40% lovers and 40% haters, and 20%
> people who are annoyed because it’s too flexible or too complicated. That’s a
> net loss in satisfaction.
How about: 40% lovers, 40% haters, and 20% people who *are initially frustrated
by the complexity, and then
On Jan 11, 2016, at 13:06 , Lee Ann Rucker wrote:
>
> no system is going to make everyone happy, so go for the most flexible one if
> you can
I’d like to advocate the opposite point of view: no system is going to make
everyone happy, so go for the the one that works best.
(Yes, I understand w
> On Jan 11, 2016, at 7:35 AM, Jim Lee wrote:
>
> We have an application, TopXNotes that allows multiple “documents” (notes) to
> be opened in adjacent views (panes). The notes can be edited individually.
> One can cut/paste/copy from any text document to/from a seperate text app, or
> from p
FWIW, I find it odd that so many apps these days seem to be following Xcode's
"lead", if you want to call it that. I still miss Xcode 3.2.6 because I could
configure it for the way *I* was most productive. Now you gotta use that
ginormous "plate" window. It shows you what it wants to show you wh
On Jan 11, 2016, at 10:18 AM, Dave wrote:
> It’s actually an NSInteger so it’s 64 bits isn’t it? But I take your point,
> the hash isn’t going to change.
>
> Any one have any other techniques for telling if a CFTypeRef has changed?
Does CFEqual() do what you need?
It depends a lot on what you
I've seen an advantage to having "attached palettes" like Xcode's Utilities
pane. When set up like this, I can see unique attributes per window and compare
two separate documents. When there's only one shared all over the place, it
might be harder at times to get context at a glance. An example
It depends on what the actual object is. CFTypeRef is the (void*) or (id)
equivalent for CoreFoundation types, so if you know what it is, check its
documentation for notifications or KVO options. If it's an immutable object
(like a CFStringRef,NSString), the object's data will never change.
--
G
I'm pleased to see so many in favor of multiple windows. It seems the arguments
in favor of a single monolithic window hinge smaller screens. But I find that
monolithic windows require larger screens (and can't share screens). The thing
about separate windows is they can overlap and still be use
Hi,
It’s actually an NSInteger so it’s 64 bits isn’t it? But I take your point, the
hash isn’t going to change.
Any one have any other techniques for telling if a CFTypeRef has changed?
All the Best
Dave
> On 11 Jan 2016, at 18:08, Jens Alfke wrote:
>
>
>> On Jan 11, 2016, at 9:57 AM, Jens
> On Jan 11, 2016, at 9:57 AM, Jens Alfke wrote:
>
> No. If the object has changed, its hash isn’t guaranteed to change; there
> exist hash collisions where two different values have the same hash. (This is
> inevitable since there are only 2^32 hash values, but a nearly infinite
> number of
> On Jan 11, 2016, at 9:48 AM, Dave wrote:
>
> I have an object that is a wrapper around a CFTypeRef. I’d like to be able to
> check if this object has changed, can I use the safely use the CFHash()
> function to do this.
No. If the object has changed, its hash isn’t guaranteed to change; th
Hi,
I have an object that is a wrapper around a CFTypeRef. I’d like to be able to
check if this object has changed, can I use the safely use the CFHash()
function to do this.
e.g. When the Wrapper Object is created, do a CFHash() on the reference and
store it as a property of the wrapper clas
Thanks for your reply.
I’ve decided to change the enum as String to a simple enum and change the
evaluation based on that enum - based on your reply. Since my method
argument is typed to that enum, I can use shortcuts and no need for
.rawValue. It’s all good now and is developer-friendly.
Eric
O
On Jan 11, 2016, at 8:04 AM, Dave wrote:
> I’ve noticed there are two forms to specify nullability on properties, is one
> preferred syntax over the other?
Judging by Apple's usage, using the property attributes (nullable and nonnull)
are preferred.
--
Seth Willits
_
> On Jan 11, 2016, at 7:37 AM, Eric E. Dolecki wrote:
>
> 1. How can I get rid of that .rawValue? It works but not coder-friendly.
In Swift one usually uses a switch statement to match enums, rather than
comparing rawValues. (There are a lot of examples in the book.)
—Jens
_
I've got a few things set up in Objective-C for getting a string value from an
enum but I'm sure it's different in Swift.
I can send the Objective-C ones if you think they would be helpful.
On Jan 11, 2016, at 10:37 AM, Eric E. Dolecki wrote:
> I have the following enum
>
> *enum SomeMode: St
Way back in the mid '90s, there was some double click tool that simply felt
like the holy grail to me.
You double clicked or option clicked on the title of a window and it would turn
that window into the "floating windoid" title bar only. We took this model and
made it so that when you collaps
On Jan 11, 2016, at 2:17 AM, Britt Durbrow wrote:
> My preference would be multiple windows (one primary document window and
> several utility panel windows) that can be snapped into place against each
> other. This gives the freedom to use multiple monitors while also having the
> screen-real
Hi,
I’ve noticed there are two forms to specify nullability on properties, is one
preferred syntax over the other?
@property (nonatomic,copy) NSString* _Nullable propA;
@property(readonly,nullable) NSString* propB;
Thanks
Dave
__
Thanks Jens and Peter, got it now.
All the Best
Dave
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I have the following enum
*enum SomeMode: String {*
*case ComputeRequired*
*case Calculating*
*case Normal*
*case ComputeUnavailable*
*}*
Works great if access like so:
*SomeMode.Calculating.rawValue*
1. How can I get rid of that .rawValue? It works but not coder-friendly.
We have an application, TopXNotes that allows multiple “documents” (notes) to
be opened in adjacent views (panes). The notes can be edited individually. One
can cut/paste/copy from any text document to/from a seperate text app, or from
pane to pane. Just one example of something different that I
> On 9 Jan 2016, at 22:19, Rick Mann wrote:
>
> In complex apps (e.g. CAD apps, IDEs) a given document has many auxiliary
> windows. The trend in UI at Apple has been to consolidate these into panes in
> a single window. I've always preferred separate windows (e.g. separate
> toolbar window).
Interesting that so many others like the multiwindow approach. I’ve always
thought that a horrible design, because you constantly have to fool with them
to get them out of the way as you work on a document. I like the approach taken
by Photoshop, where you can dock them them together in the layo
OK. My bad. The Readme had it all, and I missed it.
My unconscious Classic-Mac programmer seems to filter out python scripts still…
Thanks, it works now.
> On 11 בינו׳ 2016, at 10:44, Motti Shneor wrote:
>
> Hi. Excuse this novice question (I see previous questions relating to
> SMJobBless tha
On 11/01/2016 18:44, Motti Shneor wrote:
Hi. Excuse this novice question (I see previous questions relating to
SMJobBless that start off where I need to finish…)
I need to develop an OS-X daemon (in c++) that must run privileged. I intend to
deploy it embedded in a System-Preferences panel, th
Hi. Excuse this novice question (I see previous questions relating to
SMJobBless that start off where I need to finish…)
I need to develop an OS-X daemon (in c++) that must run privileged. I intend to
deploy it embedded in a System-Preferences panel, that will launch it using the
SMJobBless() A
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