> But, the question still does remain, even if purely for academic
> reasons - can we clear a UIView (in a custom UITableViewCell) in the
> drawRect routine after beginning to draw in it. I have tried playing around
> with two options so far
> 1. CGContextClearRect() - This however clears to a blac
Well...the occurrence of this particular scenario is very rare. It might be
expensive, but, has not had any effects on program performance so far. I am
not in control of the ranges supplied and yes, I could always check if the
range is valid before extracting the substring. However, if the programm
On 25/07/2010, at 6:47 AM, Steve Christensen wrote:
>> I am extracting strings from an NSString and I get NSRange exceptions. I
>> could always first check to see if the range is valid, but, figured I would
>> save myself the effort and use the exception handling mechanism.
NO, this is misgui
I personally wouldn't use exceptions to handle what are basically known coding
bugs, e.g., choosing not to add an extra line or two of code to do range
checking when you know ahead of time that there are strings that you don't
consider valid.
And whether or not you continue using your current e
I think a more basic question is what you're doing in -drawRect that would
generate an exception in the first place. Typically a view should already have
access to any relevant resources (strings, images, whatever) before -drawRect
is ever called. Assuming that the exception is a reasonable erro
Hi,
I am trying to draw to a custom UITableViewCell. The UITableViewCell has
a UIView and I do some custom drawing in it's drawRect. However, in some
cases while doing the drawing I run into an exception. I catch the exception
and at this point, want to clear all existing drawing in the view and