Re: Details and the concepts related to the Nib Window

2010-03-23 Thread James Bucanek
Jon Pugh wrote (Monday, March 22, 2010 11:22 PM -0700): I presume he means via a breakpoint in the debugger. Typically people put a breakpoint in init and don't see it being hit because init isn't called, initWithCoder is what is used when unarchiving object

Re: Details and the concepts related to the Nib Window

2010-03-23 Thread Chaitanya Pandit
> Also what does FilesOwner and First responder refers to. File's owner as the name suggests is the owner of the file, for example if your nib file is a window controller, the file's owner would be an object of class NSWindowController or your custom subclass of NSWindowController. > > Wheneve

Re: Details and the concepts related to the Nib Window

2010-03-22 Thread Jon Pugh
> > Whenever we drag an object from the Interface builder to our Nib window >> (like we do for a controller object), it means that we are instantiating the >> object of a class or interface. But where actually can i see it being >> instantiated. > >What do you mean by "see"? I presume he means via

Re: Details and the concepts related to the Nib Window

2010-03-22 Thread Ken Thomases
On Mar 22, 2010, at 5:07 PM, Abhinav Tyagi wrote: > Whenever we drag an object from the Interface builder to our Nib window > (like we do for a controller object), it means that we are instantiating the > object of a class or interface. But where actually can i see it being > instantiated. What d

Details and the concepts related to the Nib Window

2010-03-22 Thread Abhinav Tyagi
Hi, Thanks for your time for reviewing this. I am new to objective c and Cocoa on iMac OSX Leopard XCode3.1. Whenever we drag an object from the Interface builder to our Nib window (like we do for a controller object), it means that we are instantiating the object of a class or interface. But wh