Re: Windows following the menubar in Cocoa

2010-05-05 Thread Lee Ann Rucker
It does? That's awesome. I think putting things back where the user put them is a good reason all by itself; I always hate it when I need to move my work laptop somewhere, because all my windows from the big monitor get squished onto the little one and reorganized. Alas, my work laptop won'

Re: Windows following the menubar in Cocoa

2010-05-05 Thread Eric Gorr
On May 3, 2010, at 6:48 PM, Murat Konar wrote: > > On May 3, 2010, at 3:31 PM, Eric Gorr wrote: > >> Is there a way to configure a Cocoa window so it will follow the menubar to >> another display? > > Is it even a good idea? Probably not. However, there is at least one other situation whe

Re: Windows following the menubar in Cocoa

2010-05-03 Thread Murat Konar
On May 3, 2010, at 3:31 PM, Eric Gorr wrote: Is there a way to configure a Cocoa window so it will follow the menubar to another display? Is it even a good idea? Seems like there's more to be done than just move a window (like maybe not moving it if it won't fit, resizing it etc). I'm

Re: Windows following the menubar in Cocoa

2010-05-03 Thread Jens Alfke
On May 3, 2010, at 3:31 PM, Eric Gorr wrote: Using Xcode 3.1.3 (or 2.5), I created a standard Carbon application with a single document window. After running the application, I use the Display System Preferences to move the menubar from one display to another one. The document window for t

Windows following the menubar in Cocoa

2010-05-03 Thread Eric Gorr
Using Xcode 3.1.3 (or 2.5), I created a standard Carbon application with a single document window. After running the application, I use the Display System Preferences to move the menubar from one display to another one. The document window for the Carbon application followed the menubar and move