On Mon, Jun 17, 2013, at 07:38 AM, Keary Suska wrote:
> One possibility I know I have missed in the past is that the scroll point
> is the clip view's bounds *origin*, which is the bottom-left corner.
Note: if the document view returns YES from -isFlipped, the clip view
_also_ returns YES from -is
On Mon, Jun 17, 2013, at 08:20 AM, Keary Suska wrote:
> On Jun 17, 2013, at 8:38 AM, Keary Suska wrote:
>
> > NSScrollView* myscrollview = [[NSScrollView alloc]
> > initWithFrame:NSMakeRect(0, 0, 200, 200)];
> > NSClipView* myclipview = [[NSClipView alloc] initWithFrame:NSMakeRect(0,
> > 0,
On Jun 17, 2013, at 8:38 AM, Keary Suska wrote:
> NSScrollView* myscrollview = [[NSScrollView alloc]
> initWithFrame:NSMakeRect(0, 0, 200, 200)];
> NSClipView* myclipview = [[NSClipView alloc] initWithFrame:NSMakeRect(0, 0,
> 500, 400)];
> [myscrollview setHasVerticalScroller:YES];
> [my
On Jun 13, 2013, at 5:53 PM, Benjamin Rindt wrote:
> Hey,
> I'm trying this for I think over 3 hours just to get my View to scroll to a
> point when loaded. But not to start and cut off the rest of it, just be
> scrolled to there.
>
> Tried it in my real project, didn't work, made small test pr
Hey,
I'm trying this for I think over 3 hours just to get my View to scroll to a
point when loaded. But not to start and cut off the rest of it, just be
scrolled to there.
Tried it in my real project, didn't work, made small test project, doesn't work
either.
NSScrollView* myscrollview = [