Which version of macOS are you running?
Sent from my iPhone
> On Sep 8, 2018, at 5:53 PM, Richard Charles wrote:
>
> I have a simple NSAlert presented as an attached sheet with a single default
> OK button.
>
> When the spacebar is pressed the alert is dismissed.
>
> It this a new thing?
>
I don't know where or whether it's documented, but it's not new.
Using Space for "clicking" whichever control has focus has been around
for a while. I don't remember offhand -- it may depend on the setting
in System Preferences that governs whether all controls can get
keyboard focus.
--Andy
On
I have a simple NSAlert presented as an attached sheet with a single default OK
button.
When the spacebar is pressed the alert is dismissed.
It this a new thing?
Is this documented anywhere?
--Richard Charles
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> On 8 Sep 2018, at 21:20, Andreas Falkenhahn wrote:
>
> Unfortunately not. I can see my app in the lsdump and the path points to the
> network share but purging the LS database doesn't have any effect. macOS
> still loads the old version of my app, not the latest one on the share. Only
> by re
On 07.09.2018 at 23:45 Sean McBride wrote:
> On Mon, 3 Sep 2018 15:31:37 +0200, Andreas Falkenhahn said:
>>Optimally, I'm looking for a solution to flush the app bundle cache on
>>the iMac from the makefile that I run on the Mac Mini I use for building.
> Not sure what "the app bundle cache" is
>> If you are using ARC and want to get a strong
reference on the object, you have to use __bridge_retained
That is handy to know! I see there is also __bridge_transfer to go the other
way.
In this case we put the Cocoa controls into a NSView, which releases them.
The NSView deletes our LView,
> Le 7 sept. 2018 à 19:46, Casey McDermott a écrit :
>
> We need to link some of our C++ classes to a matching Cocoa class.
> It's easy for Cocoa to reference C++ objects. Going the other way is harder.
>
> We have been using a linker class that has a void pointer to the Obj-C object
> in the