Just as an aside, points are not Apple-specifc. They are a typesetting unit
equivalent to 1/72 of an inch. It's the same unit used for font sizes.
-jeff
On Mon, Jun 8, 2020 at 2:43 PM Gabriel Zachmann via Cocoa-dev <
cocoa-dev@lists.apple.com> wrote:
> I know this mailing list might not be the
Situation:
- I am working in Swift 5.
- I have an instance of an NSTextView. (Call it "V")
- The value has already been set once. (Call this value "T1")
- V is showing T1.
- I have an NSAttributedString from another source. (Call this value
"T2")
Desired goal:
- I want to se
I've been playing around with the NSOutlineView, and as seems to be the
usual case, the documentation from Apple is seriously deficient.
I've been trying to use bindings to a tree controller, but I'm having
difficulty getting element selection to work. I'm guessing that this would
be done by bindi
Wade
wrote:
> You want to use a file wrapper rather than data and specify the document
> type in the attributes as RTFD.
> --
> Gary L. Wade
> http://www.garywade.com/
>
> On Nov 27, 2019, at 10:18 AM, Jeff Younker via Cocoa-dev <
> cocoa-dev@lists.apple.com> wrote:
I am having some difficulty with saving NSAttributedStrings as RTFD and
then recovering
them with attachments intact. I generate a string containing an attachment
and turn that into
RTFD. When I turn that RTFD back into an NSAttributedString, I get the
.string back, and I
get an attachment, but th