Yes, CoreData is a database, and it does do ORM. It's not just an ORM, and
it's not an RDBMS.
If it wasn't a database, it couldn't store data; that is the definition of a
database. A database is not something that has row, columns, etc; it's
something that stores data in an unspecified manor.
en I'm refactoring
> using nibs or storyboards)
> * With multiple gesture recognizers in a view hierarchy, I sometimes
> accidentally set cancelsTouchesInView on the top one
>
> I hope this helps,
>
> Damian
>
> On Mar 14, 2013, at 6:55 PM, Timothy Reaves
In my iOS app, I had a single primary view controller. This controlled
three views, one of which had a gesture recognizer. This worked well.
However, as the code grew, refactored this into three view controllers, as the
primary view controller was doing too much, and it was beginning
I have a subclass of NSView, and draw into using CoreGraphics. I'd like to
add a second view (not NSScrollView) to display a zoomed section of the
primary view. I thought I had a sample project for this bookmarked, but
can no longer find it. Would anyone be able to point me in the correct
direct
On Oct 24, 2009, at 10:32 AM, Stamenkovic Florijan wrote:
On Oct 24, 2009, at 10:04, Timothy Reaves wrote:
What is the correct way to size this? I have it added, and it's
used. But by default, it doesn't size to hold it's content. I can
set he width of the table col
What is the correct way to size this? I have it added, and it's
used. But by default, it doesn't size to hold it's content. I can
set he width of the table column to a better width, but I can't seem
to find how to size the height.
Is there any way to get the table view - or column - to
I have a bundle wit the CFBundleIdentifier set using the form
com.mycompany.myapp.mybundle. When I run mdls against it, the
kMDItemContentType shows "dyn.ah62d4qmuhk2x42pxsv3g825bsu". I
thought it was supposed to show the com.mycompany.myapp.mybundle.
Any idea why this is?
___
> On 04.10.2009, at 06:30, Timothy Reaves wrote:
>> I have a bundle defined as a document type for an app. When I build
>> one of these bundles, and double-click it, it opens in my app. All
>> well and good. Except the following.
>
> Wait, the bundle is defined
On Oct 4, 2009, at 12:35 AM, Todd Heberlein wrote:
Anyone want to point out what I'm doing wrong? Any help
appreciated.
I think I had to do a Project->Add To Project... and then select the
icon file in order to get the icon to be used. Dragging the icons
into my project didn't do the t
I have a bundle defined as a document type for an app. When I build
one of these bundles, and double-click it, it opens in my app. All
well and good. Except the following.
1) I have an icns file in my bundle, and have the CFBundleIconFile key
in the info.plist in the bundle set to the
On Sep 30, 2009, at 7:53 AM, Mike Abdullah wrote:
-[NSArrayController selectedObjects] does not return proxies, it
returns the real thing. On the other hand:
-[NSArrayController selection] returns a proxy that represents the
overall selection
NSTreeController uses proxies to represent its
> On Sep 29, 2009, at 7:10 AM, "Timothy Reaves"
> > wrote:
>
>> What makes you think you can? Logically, you shouldn't be
>> able. I'd
>> imagine selectedObjects is always going to return an index set; it'd
>>
> On Sep 28, 2009, at 18:11, Kyle Sluder wrote:
>
>> On Mon, Sep 28, 2009 at 6:02 PM, Timothy Reaves
>> wrote:
>>> Well, I was hoping to bind buttons enabled property. If I use a
>>> regular NSArray backed controller this works. And you can't
> On Mon, Sep 28, 2009 at 6:02 PM, Timothy Reaves
> wrote:
>> Well, I was hoping to bind buttons enabled property. If I use a
>> regular NSArray backed controller this works. And you can't bind (at
>> least I don't know how) with selectedObjects. But
> On Mon, Sep 28, 2009 at 2:28 PM, Timothy Reaves
> wrote:
>> What is the correct way to determine if that proxy represents an
>> actual entity?
>
> If you need to determine if there is a selection, you want to use the
> selectedObjects property. If you
When you call [anArrayController selection] for an Entity-backed
NSArrayController, you always get an instance of
_NSControllerObjectProxy back. Even when there is no object
selected. It's not until you send a message to that proxy that you
get unrecognized selector error.
What is the
On Aug 28, 2009, at 11:13 PM, Chris Idou wrote:
If you have a universal binary, 32/64 and/or PPC, is there a way to
force it to run
one way or the other for testing purposes?
There is, but you probably shouldn't. A Universal binary needs to
have the tests run for all platforms,
I have a character set; I've tried both
NSCharacterSet *newlineSet = [NSCharacterSet
characterSetWithCharactersInString:@"\n"];
and
NSCharacterSet *newlineSet = [NSCharacterSet newlineCharacterSet];
I use this to read lines from a file, like so:
while ([scanner scanUpToCharactersFromSet:
On Feb 15, 2009, at 1:32 PM, Martin Redington wrote:
In my projects, I tend to define methods which need access to member
variables as class methods, and related functions, which do not need
"direct" access to any internal object data, as C functions, like the
simple example below.
@implementa
On Jan 23, 2009, at 3:33 PM, Joel Norvell wrote:
This doesn't answer the original question, but I believe it is
pertinent to this thread.
It is also possible to log from within Xcode, something I hadn't
realized until I saw the video of an excellent talk Joar Wingfors
gave at a Silicon V
On Jan 22, 2009, at 1:54 PM, Kyle Sluder wrote:
On Thu, Jan 22, 2009 at 11:53 AM, Timothy Reaves
wrote:
There are a number of reasons to use Log4Cocoa over something
like
ASL. The fact that it already supports Obj-C is the least of them.
* It supports various logging levels,
As
On Jan 21, 2009, at 4:56 PM, Barry Wark wrote:
On Wed, Jan 21, 2009 at 1:15 PM, Kyle Sluder
wrote:
On Wed, Jan 21, 2009 at 2:58 PM, Robert Kukuchka
wrote:
I'm looking into logging frameworks and see references to this
project. Does anyone know if this project is still running? I was
On Jan 22, 2009, at 8:27 AM, jonat...@mugginsoft.com wrote:
On 22 Jan 2009, at 14:14, Jeremy Pereira wrote:
On 22 Jan 2009, at 13:27, jonat...@mugginsoft.com wrote:
I do not seem to be seeing the formatted about of my OCUnit STxxx
macros.
My OCUnit test failures produce only the follow
On Dec 11, 2008, at 7:36 AM, Ian H Stewart wrote:
OK so it has been a long long time since I did anything in IB.
So I started an app like I did at NeXT - 70% of my app is GUI.
I created a new project in xcode, I then got into IB
and created my layout - buttons,
text fields, etc. connected the
I'm trying to write a query where the meta data in question is an
NSDate stored as a binary plist. Everything I am doing is failing. I
have tried '(myKey > %@, date] where date is an instance of NSDate,
where it is a NSTimeInterval, and a string. Nothing returns data (or
even calls my c
On Oct 4, 2008, at 1:01 AM, Brent Hargrave wrote:
To unit test an XML parsing method, I would like keep a dummy XML
file in a
project directory and import it into my FooTests class as a fixture of
sorts. What is the right way to do this sort of thing?
Put the file into the Resources fold
The documentation for NSTableView setSortDescriptors: starts off with
"A table column is considered sortable if it has a sort descriptor
that specifies the sorting ". I find this a bit puzzling as this is
the documentation for NSTableView, not NSTableColumn.
What is the correct formulat
> On Jul 23, 2008, at 6:48 PM, Mike wrote:
>
>> Hello,
>>
>> During development and debug I typically use tons of NSLog()-
>> messages to get info what's happening.
>> I don't wish to include these messages to release-build so what is
>> common/recommended way to get rid of them?
>>
>> Should I com
On Thu, May 8, 2008 02:45, Chris Hanson wrote:
--snip--
> And unless the object's class documentation says instances
> are safe to share across multiple threads, you'd be violating its API
> contract by doing so.
>
Just a point of clarification here: this me violate it's design (intended
usage pat
On Apr 8, 2008, at 9:02 PM, Nick Zitzmann wrote:
On Apr 8, 2008, at 6:30 PM, Timothy Reaves wrote:
What advantage does NSUinteger have over uint32? I realize that
on a 64 bit machine, it would be a uint64.
None. It only declares the integer to be 32-bit on 32-bit builds,
and 64-bit
What advantage does NSUinteger have over uint32? I realize that on
a 64 bit machine, it would be a uint64.
___
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