On Nov 7, 2016, at 19:55 , Rick Mann wrote:
>
> Xcode never gives you controls for setting a class name
Much like the Spanish Inquisition.
(Monty Python joke, for those going “Huh?”)
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> On Nov 7, 2016, at 19:51 , Quincey Morris
> wrote:
>
> On Nov 7, 2016, at 19:44 , Rick Mann wrote:
>>
>> I can drag out an NSWindow, and I can even change its class to NSPanel, but
>> I can't set the style.
>
> You mean you dragged out a window controller, right?
Correct.
> When I do th
Hmm, maybe. I missed that. When I select it, I get nothing at all, not sure how
to specify the images for my tabs. But I'll look into it. Thanks!
> On Nov 7, 2016, at 19:49 , Quincey Morris
> wrote:
>
> On Nov 7, 2016, at 19:45 , Rick Mann wrote:
>>
>> I just wanted it to do all the heavy li
On Nov 7, 2016, at 19:44 , Rick Mann wrote:
>
> I can drag out an NSWindow, and I can even change its class to NSPanel, but I
> can't set the style.
You mean you dragged out a window controller, right?
When I do this, I can change the window’s class to NSPanel, and then the
attributes inspect
On Nov 7, 2016, at 19:45 , Rick Mann wrote:
>
> I just wanted it to do all the heavy lifting there, like a tab controller.
Now that I think about it, doesn’t the “toolbar” style of NSTabViewController
do what you want?
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On Nov 7, 2016, at 17:00 , Charles Jenkins wrote:
>
> What am I doing wrong?
What is the error message?
And you did import UserNotifications, right?
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> On Nov 7, 2016, at 19:43 , Quincey Morris
> wrote:
>
> On Nov 7, 2016, at 18:01 , Rick Mann wrote:
>>
>> Is there a standard control to implement the Xcode inspector tabs across the
>> top?
>
> My guess is that it’s just a custom view with a series of buttons, with the
> button status dr
> On Nov 7, 2016, at 19:40 , Quincey Morris
> wrote:
>
> On Nov 7, 2016, at 18:28 , Rick Mann wrote:
>>
>> Is there no way to make a floating inspector window in a Storyboard in Xcode
>> 8?
>
> What’s preventing you from dragging out a window controller onto the
> storyboard?
>
> However
On Nov 7, 2016, at 18:01 , Rick Mann wrote:
>
> Is there a standard control to implement the Xcode inspector tabs across the
> top?
My guess is that it’s just a custom view with a series of buttons, with the
button status driven by the selected tab of the tabless tab view. Is there some
other
On Nov 7, 2016, at 18:28 , Rick Mann wrote:
>
> Is there no way to make a floating inspector window in a Storyboard in Xcode
> 8?
What’s preventing you from dragging out a window controller onto the
storyboard?
However, I would be inclined to put it in its own storyboard, since there’s not
Is there no way to make a floating inspector window in a Storyboard in Xcode 8?
--
Rick Mann
rm...@latencyzero.com
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Is there a standard control to implement the Xcode inspector tabs across the
top? The segmented control doesn't seem to have a controllable height. Tab
controller doesn't seem to have a mode that looks like that. I figure the rest
is built with a (tabless) tab controller and stack view.
--
R
I’m writing my first WatchKit app. My deployment target is watchOS 3.1.
I have searched the documentation and tutorials for scheduling local
notifications on the watch, and I’m stuck at step 1. This line of my
WatchKit Extension app’s InterfaceController.swift app file will not
compile:
let con
> On Nov 7, 2016, at 2:33 PM, Quincey Morris
> wrote:
>
> On Nov 7, 2016, at 10:46 , Richard Charles wrote:
>>
>> This is exactly the same as before but it now works!
>
> Regarding that particular mystery, NSChangeUndone decrements the change
> count. If it happened to be 1 when you tried t
> On Nov 7, 2016, at 12:24 PM, Jens Alfke wrote:
>
>> On Nov 7, 2016, at 10:46 AM, Richard Charles wrote:
>>
>>[doc performSelector:@selector(updateChangeCount:)
>> withObject:@(NSChangeUndone)
>> afterDelay:0];
>
> That one definitely won’t work. The parameter t
On Nov 7, 2016, at 10:46 , Richard Charles wrote:
>
> This is exactly the same as before but it now works!
Regarding that particular mystery, NSChangeUndone decrements the change count.
If it happened to be 1 when you tried this, the document would stop being
dirty. Presumably, in your first t
Why not just call [doc revertToContentsOfURL:[doc url] ofType:[doc fileType]
error:&error], which is what the docs for -revertDocumentToSaved: say it does
after the user confirmation?
—Jens
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> On 7 Nov 2016, at 18:46, Richard Charles wrote:
>
> NSChangeUndone
try NSChangeCleared
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> On Nov 7, 2016, at 10:46 AM, Richard Charles wrote:
>
>[doc performSelector:@selector(updateChangeCount:)
> withObject:@(NSChangeUndone)
> afterDelay:0];
That one definitely won’t work. The parameter to updateChangeCount: is an
integer (enum) value, not an objec
I have a dirty document that needs to be cleared programmatically. So I try the
following but it does not work. I have verified that updateChangeCount: is
being called but the document change count state is not being changed. This
code is executed on the main thread.
// Called from a contro
> On 7 Nov 2016, at 16:43, Alastair Houghton
> wrote:
>
> On 6 Nov 2016, at 06:18, Quincey Morris
> wrote:
>
>> There is probably no perfect strategy that works for every font. However,
>> for the kinds of design decisions that Apple made when it started doing
>> typography properly (in th
On 6 Nov 2016, at 06:18, Quincey Morris
wrote:
>
> 5. It’s rather indeterminate what glyphs the bounding box should reflect. In
> particular, in digital typography using Unicode characters, a font as
> perceived by the user may be a composite of multiple actual fonts. For
> example, there’s l
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