Thanks ... It worked (/Volumes/{name of disk as it appears in the Finder}
)RegardsAbhijeet Original message From:"Nick Zitzmann"< n...@chronosnet.com
>Date: 14 Dec 10 12:38:27Subject: Re: How to read a text file over a networkTo:
Cc: cocoa...@lists.apple.comon Dec 13, 2010, at 10:12 PM, Abhijeet
You should check out NSFileManager to see if you can simplify your read methods
- specifically the contentsAtPath: method.
Then decode the data from the file using the appropriate encoding.
Once you've figured out what the URI for the file is, you can use NSFileManager
again to fetch it, using an
On Dec 13, 2010, at 10:12 PM, Abhijeet Singh wrote:
> I think the type of server is AFP. Because the file path displayed by Finder
> is: afp://PriyankaMac._afpovertcp._tcp.local/shared/file1.txt.
> But if i put the same file path in my file2.txt my program fails to open
> file1.txt file.
That'
Hi,I think the type of server is AFP. Because the file path displayed by Finder
is: afp://Priyanka Mac.afpovertcp.tcp.local/shared/file1.txt.But if i put the
same file path in my file2.txt my program fails to open file1.txt file.
Abhijeet Original message From:"Nick Zitzmann"< n...@chronosnet.co
On 13 Dec 2010, at 4:54 AM, Abhijeet Singh wrote:
> My question is if user wants to define some network file path then:How to
> define a network file path? (I tried keeping file1.txt over a network and
> define its path as given in "Get Info" panel in file2.txt)How to read a file
> over a netw
On Dec 13, 2010, at 5:54 AM, Abhijeet Singh wrote:
> Hi,I am new to Mac. In my application I have to read a text file (say
> file1.txt) from a user defined location/path. User defines this filepath in
> another text file (say file2.txt). My program first reads file2.txt and gets
> the path of