Re: NSSplitView question - how to implement my own "adjustViews" style method

2012-07-19 Thread Gary L. Wade
I don't know for sure, but you might be able to get around the 3rd party plug-in issue by using runtime attributes instead. -- Gary L. Wade (Sent from my iPad) http://www.garywade.com/ ___ Cocoa-dev mailing list (Cocoa-dev@lists.apple.com) Please do

Re: NSSplitView question - how to implement my own "adjustViews" style method

2012-07-19 Thread Rainer Brockerhoff
On Jul 19, 2012, at 11:06 , cocoa-dev-requ...@lists.apple.com wrote: > Date: Thu, 19 Jul 2012 11:42:07 +0300 > From: Motti Shneor > Message-ID: > > Thanks for the note. Indeed, RBSplitView is a complete, functional and > feature-loaded class, but it is also lagging behind current Cocoa > d

Re: NSSplitView question - how to implement my own "adjustViews" style method

2012-07-19 Thread Motti Shneor
Hello Gideon. Thanks for the note. Indeed, RBSplitView is a complete, functional and feature-loaded class, but it is also lagging behind current Cocoa developments, and does not integrate well XCode 4.x and with SDK 10.7 or and SDK 10.8. Testing with it I saw problems in: 1. Look and feel (not

Re: NSSplitView question - how to implement my own "adjustViews" style method

2012-07-18 Thread Gideon King
I always use RBSplitView - has all that stuff built in and more… http://brockerhoff.net/blog/tag/rbsplitview/ Seems to work fine for my needs. Regards Gideon On 03/07/2012, at 2:40 PM, Motti Shneor wrote: > Thanks Graham (Sigh…) > > I was beginning to think I'm stupid or something, strug

Re: NSSplitView question - how to implement my own "adjustViews" style method

2012-07-17 Thread Motti Shneor
Thanks Graham (Sigh…) I was beginning to think I'm stupid or something, struggling so hard with a UI element as ordinary as a Split-View. I have the feeling I "almost got it", and I even think I understand why and when delegate methods are being called. Rolling out my own SplitView doesn't se

Re: NSSplitView question - how to implement my own "adjustViews" style method

2012-07-03 Thread Rainer Brockerhoff
On Jul 3, 2012, at 12:11 , Andy Lee wrote: > On Jul 3, 2012, at 10:31 AM, Rainer Brockerhoff wrote: >> Now that's an interesting idea, thanks Andy! I'll look into it soon, I hope. > > P.P.S. I'm not sure how to deal with autolayout constraints that might get > broken. Does replaceSubview:with: t

Re: NSSplitView question - how to implement my own "adjustViews" style method

2012-07-03 Thread Andy Lee
On Jul 3, 2012, at 10:31 AM, Rainer Brockerhoff wrote: > > On Jul 3, 2012, at 11:03 , Andy Lee wrote: > >> I haven't used RBSplitView, but it sounds like it might be handy to have a >> method for replacing an already-set-up NSSplitView with an RBSplitView. >> Maybe it could be a category meth

Re: NSSplitView question - how to implement my own "adjustViews" style method

2012-07-03 Thread Andy Lee
On Jul 3, 2012, at 10:31 AM, Rainer Brockerhoff wrote: > On Jul 3, 2012, at 11:03 , Andy Lee wrote: > >> I haven't used RBSplitView, but it sounds like it might be handy to have a >> method for replacing an already-set-up NSSplitView with an RBSplitView. >> Maybe it could be a category method on

Re: NSSplitView question - how to implement my own "adjustViews" style method

2012-07-03 Thread Rainer Brockerhoff
On Jul 3, 2012, at 11:03 , Andy Lee wrote: > I haven't used RBSplitView, but it sounds like it might be handy to have a > method for replacing an already-set-up NSSplitView with an RBSplitView. Maybe > it could be a category method on NSSplitView, something like this: > ... > This way you can s

Re: NSSplitView question - how to implement my own "adjustViews" style method

2012-07-03 Thread Andy Lee
I haven't used RBSplitView, but it sounds like it might be handy to have a method for replacing an already-set-up NSSplitView with an RBSplitView. Maybe it could be a category method on NSSplitView, something like this: - (RBSplitView *)replaceWithRBSplitView { // Retain and autorelease

Re: NSSplitView question - how to implement my own "adjustViews" style method

2012-07-03 Thread Rainer Brockerhoff
On Jul 3, 2012, at 01:46 , cocoa-dev-requ...@lists.apple.com wrote: > Date: Tue, 03 Jul 2012 10:14:21 +1000 > From: Graham Cox > Message-ID: > > On 03/07/2012, at 12:21 AM, Motti Shneor wrote: > >> I really need an advice here. > > This will sound flippant but it's not meant to be: implement

Re: NSSplitView question - how to implement my own "adjustViews" style method

2012-07-03 Thread Motti Shneor
Thanks again Graham and all the rest --- We're going somewhere now. On 3 ביול 2012, at 08:22, Graham Cox wrote: > > On 03/07/2012, at 2:46 PM, Motti Shneor wrote: > >> have the feeling I "almost got it", and I even think I understand why and >> when delegate methods are being called. Rollin

Re: NSSplitView question - how to implement my own "adjustViews" style method

2012-07-02 Thread Kyle Sluder
On Tue, Jul 3, 2012, at 03:22 PM, Graham Cox wrote: > True in part. But you could subclass NSView instead. After all, > NSSplitView doesn't really bring that much to the table - it relies on > inheriting NSView to store its subviews, the only thing it draws is the > actual splitter itself, which is

Re: NSSplitView question - how to implement my own "adjustViews" style method

2012-07-02 Thread Graham Cox
On 03/07/2012, at 2:46 PM, Motti Shneor wrote: > have the feeling I "almost got it", and I even think I understand why and > when delegate methods are being called. Rolling out my own SplitView doesn't > seem to be easier than finding the answer to my question, because to inherit > from NSSp

Re: NSSplitView question - how to implement my own "adjustViews" style method

2012-07-02 Thread Quincey Morris
On Jul 2, 2012, at 21:46 , Motti Shneor wrote: > for god sake, why isn't there a [mySplitView setSubview:panelSubview > collapsedStateTo:YES/NO] Well, one possible answer is to ask yourself if you're asking the right questions. I think there's perhaps a small difference between the user c

Re: NSSplitView question - how to implement my own "adjustViews" style method

2012-07-02 Thread Todd Heberlein
On Jul 2, 2012, at 9:46 PM, Motti Shneor wrote: > Thanks Graham (Sigh…) > > I was beginning to think I'm stupid or something, struggling so hard with a > UI element as ordinary as a Split-View. I ran into this exact same problem last week. I can't believe it is an extremely rare situation. I

Re: NSSplitView question - how to implement my own "adjustViews" style method

2012-07-02 Thread Motti Shneor
Thanks Graham (Sigh…) I was beginning to think I'm stupid or something, struggling so hard with a UI element as ordinary as a Split-View. I have the feeling I "almost got it", and I even think I understand why and when delegate methods are being called. Rolling out my own SplitView doesn't se

Re: NSSplitView question - how to implement my own "adjustViews" style method

2012-07-02 Thread Graham Cox
On 03/07/2012, at 12:21 AM, Motti Shneor wrote: > I really need an advice here. This will sound flippant but it's not meant to be: implement your own split view. NSSplitView is the most bizarre piece of design and difficult to get to behave just how you want even in simple cases like having

Re: NSSplitView Question

2008-08-04 Thread Iain Houston
The TwoManyControllers sample code does what you want I think mostly generated from declarative as far as I can see On 4 Aug 2008, at 06:41, Graham Cox wrote: This is not any thing to do with NSSplitView as such. You're asking "how to implement a master-detail interface". Try doing searchin

Re: NSSplitView Question

2008-08-03 Thread Negm-Awad Amin
Am Mo,04.08.2008 um 07:35 schrieb Eric Lee: Sorry, I accidently did something wrong on that message. Here's the one I'm actually asking... How do you make a NSSplitView so that when you click something on one side, the other side is updated. For example, take the mail application. When

Re: NSSplitView Question

2008-08-03 Thread Graham Cox
This is not any thing to do with NSSplitView as such. You're asking "how to implement a master-detail interface". Try doing searching on those terms, phrase or a variation of it, I'm sure it's been well- covered. The essentials are - detect the selection change in the master view, use it t