Okay, so, here's the solution … The problem was in this …
Wrong way
I was listening for contentView frame changes
(NSViewDidChangeFrameNotification) and I was calling display/invalidateShadow
whenever I receieved this notification.
Correct way
NSWindowDelegate has windowDidResize notification
On Wednesday, 24. April 2013 at 1:28, Ken Thomases wrote:
Hi Ken,
> It's not clear if you tried to use [self invalidateShadow] instead of all
> three lines or just instead of the last two. The shadow shape is computed
> from the visible content of the window. That's why there's a call to -disp
On Apr 23, 2013, at 5:55 AM, Robert Vojta wrote:
> I do use borderless & transparent NSWindow with shadow. The way I do
> initialize this window is at the end of this email. I experienced lot of
> problems with shadow, but found in Apple examples that the only way to fix
> shadow (= read to dis
Hallo all,
I do use borderless & transparent NSWindow with shadow. The way I do initialize
this window is at the end of this email. I experienced lot of problems with
shadow, but found in Apple examples that the only way to fix shadow (= read to
display it correctly) is to call …
[self displ