Le 9 févr. 09 à 06:37, Rob Keniger a écrit :
On 08/02/2009, at 9:52 PM, Gerriet M. Denkmann wrote:
When I build a Cocoa Project with 32/64 bit, this line gets a
warning:
NSSize a = NSMakeSize( 11.2, 22.4);
which went away using:
NSSize a = NSMakeSize( (CGFloat)11.2, (CGFloa
On 09/02/2009, at 6:33 PM, Jean-Daniel Dupas wrote:
NSSize a = NSMakeSize( 11.2f, 22.4f);
The "f" suffix is a hint to the compiler that it's a float value.
A very bad idea as it would force usage of float in 64bits
applications where NSSize expect 64 bits CGFloat.
So what is the recomme
Le 9 févr. 09 à 09:50, Rob Keniger a écrit :
On 09/02/2009, at 6:33 PM, Jean-Daniel Dupas wrote:
NSSize a = NSMakeSize( 11.2f, 22.4f);
The "f" suffix is a hint to the compiler that it's a float value.
A very bad idea as it would force usage of float in 64bits
applications where NSSize e
On 09/02/2009, at 7:07 PM, Jean-Daniel Dupas wrote:
Which warning flag have you enabled to have this warning. I don't
see it by default ?
Hmm, I think it might be "Implicit Conversion to 32 bit
type" (GCC_WARN_64_TO_32_BIT_CONVERSION).
--
Rob Keniger
_
Hello Amsterdam CocoaHeads!
Our next meeting is this Wednesday, 11 February, from 7 - 9 PM.
This month, Austin Sarner will give a presentation on the iPhone's
table view - UITableView - and Axel Roest will tell us about his
recent CocoaBootcamp training from the Big Nerd Ranch.
Visit the G
I'm not sure where to begin with this one, but I want to create some
music purely through code; no use of devices or instruments or
anything. That said, I don't want to to come out sounding like beeps
or bloops; I'd rather like to be able to play around with generating
sound like I can do with gra
On 08 Feb 09, at 22:41, Mahaboob wrote:
I'm using a table view to show all the audio files. When I'm
selecting one
file among these and click on the record button, the newly recording
sound
should be attached to the end of the selected file.
I'm referring the SpeakeHere example of apple.
But
On 07 Feb 09, at 16:06, Kevin Walzer wrote:
I am making progress on this by refactoring the code to include the
Cocoa methods in a Cocoa class and the Tcl C-API code in a separate
file, called in normal C procedural style.
Keep in mind that there's no restriction against calling ObjC methods
Le 9 févr. 09 à 10:14, Rob Keniger a écrit :
On 09/02/2009, at 7:07 PM, Jean-Daniel Dupas wrote:
Which warning flag have you enabled to have this warning. I don't
see it by default ?
Hmm, I think it might be "Implicit Conversion to 32 bit
type" (GCC_WARN_64_TO_32_BIT_CONVERSION).
I
-Original Message-
From: cocoa-dev-bounces+jmunson=his@lists.apple.com
[mailto:cocoa-dev-bounces+jmunson=his@lists.apple.com] On Behalf Of
mmalc Crawford
Sent: Saturday, February 07, 2009 1:23 PM
To: Cocoa-Dev (Apple)
Subject: Re: NSTableView Popup Column issue
On Feb 6, 2009, at
hi, everybody, i've 2 apps: ipone's app and app on my mac.
i wanna receive some message from iphone to my mac's app.
for example, my iphone's app has 2 buttons:
-(IBAction) first
{
// here i should send message "FIRST" to mac's app
}
-(IBAction) second
{
// here i should send message "SECOND" t
Bonjour is just for discovery. You need to add in network code to send
and receive data. Check out the PictureSharing sample code. Not sure
of exact names, but there are a few samples you will ultimately need
that should have PictureSharing in their name.
Sent from my iPhone
On Feb 9, 2009
yes, thanks, i have seen this example. but maybe you know how to add some kind
of listener, which will listen when data is changed? 'coz in example i should
select once again service's name for viewing new data
From: Ricky Sharp
To: Carlo Gulliani
Cc: cocoa-d
Here is a picture of what I would to do:
http://ericgorr.net/cocoadev/outlinetable/namedparts.png
Anything outside of the green box will be clipped.
Basically, I have a NSTextField inside of a NSView which is being used
as a label for a NSImageView.
I would like to allow the user to edit
The Sketch.app example on your hard disk may provide guidance.
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Please do not post admin requests or moderator comments to the list.
Contact the moderators at cocoa-dev-admins(at)lists.apple.com
Hel
I'm sort of new to Cocoa, and C - as a learning project, I'm trying to
write a very simple music/MP3 player.
Currently, I'm stuck on getting MP3 data into the application and,
well, playing it audibly. I've got a simple "Cocoa Document-based
Application" template created, and have a simple UI that
On 9 Feb 2009, at 12:43, Rob Keniger wrote:
On 08/02/2009, at 9:52 PM, Gerriet M. Denkmann wrote:
When I build a Cocoa Project with 32/64 bit, this line gets a
warning:
NSSize a = NSMakeSize( 11.2, 22.4);
which went away using:
NSSize a = NSMakeSize( (CGFloat)11.2, (CGFloa
I just build /Developer/Examples/AppKit/Spotlighter.
Works fine in 32 bit mode.
Then I tried "32/64-bit Universal", but now the "Grouped Results" are
always empty.
So: is there a bug in Apple's code? Or are some 64 bit libraries broken?
And what can I do to get this working in 64-bit?
Kind
On Feb 9, 2009, at 1:50 AM, Rob Keniger wrote:
So what is the recommendation for 64-bit development? Do we really
have to litter our code with (CGFloat) casts all over the place, or
is there some way we can tell the compiler to treat our floating
point literals as float on 32-bit and doubl
Hi,
I'm looking for a way to launch the iPhone Mail application without
opening a new mail message.
[[UIApplication sharedApplication] openURL:[NSURL
URLWithString:@"mailto:";]] works fine, but it opens a new message. Is
there a way to simply launch the mail application without having a new
On Feb 9, 2009, at 10:51 AM, Erik Buck wrote:
On Feb 9, 2009, at 10:17 AM, Eric Gorr wrote:
Here is a picture of what I would to do:
http://ericgorr.net/cocoadev/outlinetable/namedparts.png
Anything outside of the green box will be clipped.
Basically, I have a NSTextField inside of a NSVie
The Chicago CocoaHeads / Chicago Cocoa and WebObjects User Group is
holding our next meeting Tuesday, February 10th, at 7:00 PM at the
Apple Store on Michigan Ave.
Agenda:
- How do people really use the iPhone
- adjournment to O'Toole's
When:
Tue
On Mon, Feb 9, 2009 at 10:56 AM, elliott cable wrote:
> I'm sort of new to Cocoa, and C - as a learning project, I'm trying to
> write a very simple music/MP3 player.
>
> Currently, I'm stuck on getting MP3 data into the application and,
> well, playing it audibly. I've got a simple "Cocoa Documen
On Mon, Feb 9, 2009 at 3:33 AM, Jean-Daniel Dupas
wrote:
>
> Le 9 févr. 09 à 06:37, Rob Keniger a écrit :
>
>>
>> On 08/02/2009, at 9:52 PM, Gerriet M. Denkmann wrote:
>>
>>> When I build a Cocoa Project with 32/64 bit, this line gets a warning:
>>>NSSize a = NSMakeSize( 11.2, 22.4);
>>> w
On Mon, Feb 9, 2009 at 10:56 AM, elliott cable wrote:
> I'm sort of new to Cocoa, and C - as a learning project, I'm trying to
> write a very simple music/MP3 player.
If you're not using QuickTime for a specific purpose, try just using NSSound.
--Kyle Sluder
_
On 2/9/09 11:59 AM, Jean-Daniel Dupas said:
>> Hmm, I think it might be "Implicit Conversion to 32 bit
>> type" (GCC_WARN_64_TO_32_BIT_CONVERSION).
>
>IMHO, this flag is recommended only to compile 64 bits code. On 32
>bits arch, as you saw, most of the warnings are irrelevant.
I disagree. It ca
Hi list,
In Mail.app the token fields for To: and Cc: show scroll bars if there
are more than 4 lines to display. Has anybody a hint of how to do
this? As far as I can see this is made impossible by the fact that
NSTokenTextView (the view displaying the content for NSTokenField) is
privat
>> Since UDSs are bidirectional, I don't need an explicit receivePort. The
>> documentation for NSConnection states that if receivePort is nil, then a
>> port of the same type as sendPort will be automatically created. My guess is
>> that this is done to provide support for distributed objects over
Le 9 févr. 09 à 19:04, Sean McBride a écrit :
On 2/9/09 11:59 AM, Jean-Daniel Dupas said:
Hmm, I think it might be "Implicit Conversion to 32 bit
type" (GCC_WARN_64_TO_32_BIT_CONVERSION).
IMHO, this flag is recommended only to compile 64 bits code. On 32
bits arch, as you saw, most of the w
On Feb 9, 2009, at 11:04 AM, Sean McBride wrote:
I agree with the OP that CGFloat is very annoying in this respect. My
solution has been to use the 'f' suffix for constants.
The problem with that is, if you do a mathematical operation on a
double using a float (including constants), you wi
On 2/9/09 12:02 PM, Nick Zitzmann said:
>> I agree with the OP that CGFloat is very annoying in this respect. My
>> solution has been to use the 'f' suffix for constants.
>
>The problem with that is, if you do a mathematical operation on a
>double using a float (including constants), you will los
At 12:41 PM -0500 2/9/09, Michael Ash wrote:
> A very bad idea as it would force usage of float in 64bits applications
where NSSize expect 64 bits CGFloat.
So? Float converts to double just fine. There are no bad consequences
for passing 11.2f to a function that takes double, aside from an
u
On Feb 6, 2009, at 1:14 PM, Tom Fortmann wrote:
Is there a way of determining if a GUI user (ignoring remote shells
and
such) is logged in from a system daemon? It looks like the
WindowServer
process is started for a user session, but I'm not sure scanning the
process
list is the best way
On Mon, Feb 9, 2009 at 10:04 AM, Sean McBride wrote:
> On 2/8/09 11:14 PM, Clark Cox said:
>
>>> A somehow related question:
>>> How does one find out, in which mode (32 vs. 64 bit) an app is running?
>>
>>#ifdef __LP64__
>
> Apple's headers inconsistently use #if and #ifdef.
Because #if and #ifd
On Feb 8, 2009, at 9:54 PM, Alejandro Rodriguez wrote:
I have a NSView that is layer-backed (setWantsLayer:YES) and when I
add it to another subview it works fine. But if I use a CAConstraint
to chage it's location then controls inside the view stop responding
to events. Any clues anyone?
On Mon, Feb 9, 2009 at 11:11 AM, Steve Sisak wrote:
> At 12:41 PM -0500 2/9/09, Michael Ash wrote:
>>
>> > A very bad idea as it would force usage of float in 64bits applications
>>>
>>> where NSSize expect 64 bits CGFloat.
>>
>> So? Float converts to double just fine. There are no bad consequen
Namaste!
If I have two entities, A and B, where A <-->>B, and the delete rule in
entity A's relationship to B is cascade, and B's delete rule for the
relationship to A is nullify, what happens to the actual "row" that holds
the relationship data in A that was once B after B is deleted? Does it ge
On 2/9/09 11:24 AM, Clark Cox said:
>> Apple's headers inconsistently use #if and #ifdef.
>
>Because #if and #ifdef will both give the proper result in this
>instance (i.e. the GCC compiler either defines __LP64__ to true, or it
>doesn't define it at all), they are interchangeable.
>
>> I recommen
On Mon, Feb 9, 2009 at 2:44 PM, Jon C. Munson II wrote:
> If I have two entities, A and B, where A <-->>B, and the delete rule in
> entity A's relationship to B is cascade, and B's delete rule for the
> relationship to A is nullify, what happens to the actual "row" that holds
> the relationship d
If I have two entities, A and B, where A <-->>B, and the delete rule
in
entity A's relationship to B is cascade, and B's delete rule for the
relationship to A is nullify, what happens to the actual "row" that
holds
the relationship data in A that was once B after B is deleted? Does
it get
c
Namaste!
I found the issue.
After deleting my test data and starting with a blank database, I noticed
the tableview was still exhibiting the same behavior - displaying the
beginning paren as if attempting to dump the object data.
After stopping the program, I checked the tableview bindings and
Thank you to everyone that responded.
After reading through the Technical Q&A QA1133 and Technical Note TN2083 (as
well as all of your responses) I decided to use the utmpx API's for this
application. I like the concept of dividing users and system functions into
separate user agents and system d
Namaste!
Thanks Ben!
I just wanted to make sure I wasn't left with "orphans" hanging around that
would require later maintenance...
To I.Savant: Actually, I am curious to know from the perspective of either
the XML type or SQLite type. However, Ben's response provided the needed
answer, which
On Mon, Feb 9, 2009 at 12:10 PM, Sean McBride wrote:
> On 2/9/09 11:24 AM, Clark Cox said:
>
>>> Apple's headers inconsistently use #if and #ifdef.
>>
>>Because #if and #ifdef will both give the proper result in this
>>instance (i.e. the GCC compiler either defines __LP64__ to true, or it
>>doesn'
I need a "collection of views" to display subviews of nonequal
heights, like this:
--
This item happens to have 3 text boxes
This item happens to have 3 text boxes
This item happens to have 3 text boxes
--
This item happens
On Mon, Feb 9, 2009 at 3:31 PM, Jon C. Munson II wrote:
> To I.Savant: Actually, I am curious to know from the perspective of either
> the XML type or SQLite type. However, Ben's response provided the needed
> answer, which is that there isn't anything left hanging around with which to
> bother
> -Original Message-
> From: I. Savant [mailto:idiotsavant2...@gmail.com]
> Sent: Monday, February 09, 2009 3:58 PM
> To: jmun...@his.com
> Cc: Ben Trumbull; Cocoa Developers
> Subject: Re: Question regarding nullified relationship objects
>
> On Mon, Feb 9, 2009 at 3:31 PM, Jon C. Munson
On 2/9/09 10:42 AM, Peter N Lewis said:
>Personally, I just switch the whole project to compile everything in
>Objective C++ and this eliminates the need for ifdef __cplusplus at
>essentially no cost in compile time, execution speed or executable
>size. It just means you are only dealing with one
Hi list,
I'm overriding -drawPage: in a PDFView subclass with the intent of
layering two PDFs on top of each other. It works great on screen, but
when I attempt to print the document, PDFKit just prints the document
PDFView rather than using my -drawPage: method. I've tried -[PDFView
print:], -[
On 09 Feb 09, at 13:06, Jon C. Munson II wrote:
[Jon C. Munson II] My intent with the question was to seek clarity
rather
than make an assumption. The dox don't say what happens, so one is
left to
make assumptions. Given that making assumptions about whether
maintenance
is needed or not is
On Mon, Feb 9, 2009 at 3:57 PM, Jerry Krinock wrote:
> I need a "collection of views" to display subviews of nonequal heights, like
> this:
Take a number. :-) An Apple-designed, all-encompassing, animated,
subclass-able collection view which manages arbitrarily-sized subviews
would be *awesome
On Mon, Feb 9, 2009 at 4:06 PM, Jon C. Munson II wrote:
> Additionally, because Core Data works in a way that I'm not quite used to,
> clarification of the process was/is a good thing.
Absolutely. :-)
--
I.S.
___
Cocoa-dev mailing list (Cocoa-dev@l
Hi guys
I have a window with an image showing on it. Above this I have a window,
which contains an IKImageView derived class. The IKImageView has a PNG in
it, which has a transparency layer. What I need to do, is to make that
image appear above the image I have in my main window, that is, the co
Something similar to what you're asking was discussed on this list
last week. To get you started:
[window setOpaque:NO];
[window setBackgroundColor:[NSColor colorWithCalibratedWhite:1.0
alpha:0.5]];
On Feb 9, 2009, at 1:55 PM, Christian Graus wrote:
I have a window with an image showing
Thanks - I've been trying to use NSColor clearColor, and that's not worked
at all, I'll give this a go.
On Tue, Feb 10, 2009 at 9:18 AM, Steve Christensen wrote:
> Something similar to what you're asking was discussed on this list last
> week. To get you started:
>
> [window setOpaque:NO];
> [wi
Hey all, I've got a fairly simple server <-> client app in
development. The clients need to be able to communicate with the
server and the server needs to be able to communicate with the
clients. So far I've got the clients getting a NSMutableArray from the
server fine, but I cannot figure out how
I have an annoying problem that whenever I start a new Xcode project,
it defaults to naming my application based on a project I created
about three years ago. I have no idea where it gets this information
or how to change it. I end up having to spend the first half an hour
of every new proj
Isn't it the name of the active executable under the Executable
group? (Double clicking it reveals a name field in the dialog...)
Dave
On Feb 9, 2009, at 3:40 PM, Graham Cox wrote:
I have an annoying problem that whenever I start a new Xcode
project, it defaults to naming my application ba
Assuming I have two identical USB keyboards (actually barcode
scanners) connected to a mac, is there any way to tell which of them a
keyboard event came from?
I can get to the keyboard type easily enough, but that only helps when
I have different keyboards:
- (void)sendEvent:(NSEvent *)an
On Feb 9, 2009, at 4:33 PM, Allyn Bauer wrote:
Hey all, I've got a fairly simple server <-> client app in
development. The clients need to be able to communicate with the
server and the server needs to be able to communicate with the
clients. So far I've got the clients getting a NSMutableArray
On 10 Feb 2009, at 9:41 am, Dave DeLong wrote:
Isn't it the name of the active executable under the Executable
group? (Double clicking it reveals a name field in the dialog...)
Not for me - I see the Get Info dialog, with a non-editable Name
field. The name there is correct, and that's t
On Feb 9, 2009, at 1:28 PM, Kyle Sluder wrote:
I'm overriding -drawPage: in a PDFView subclass with the intent of
layering two PDFs on top of each other. It works great on screen, but
when I attempt to print the document, PDFKit just prints the document
PDFView rather than using my -drawPage: me
I'm sorry, I'm not sure that I'm following this.
Looking at it more closely, on the side I want this behaviour, it's just an
IKImageView derived class on top of a window. So, I just need to make the
IKImageView show the image, transparently. I've tried setting the Opaque
setting, but it doesn't a
Xcode will expand build settings in your Info.plist when it copies it
into your product.
This is a build setting that Xcode fills in by default when building a
target, not necessarily one Xcode provides UI for in the Build tab.
See the Xcode Build Settings Reference for the settings that af
Hi all,
Anyone know if NSSavePanel can be made to line wrap the text set with
its setMessage:? (That's the text it shows at the top of the panel.)
Thanks,
--
Sean McBride, B. Eng s...@rogue-research.com
Rogue Research
At 12:52 PM -0800 2/9/09, Clark Cox wrote:
On Mon, Feb 9, 2009 at 12:10 PM, Sean McBride wrote:
> On 2/9/09 11:24 AM, Clark Cox said:
>>That is, the preprocessor treats any undefined identifier in an '#if'
or '#elif" as if it were defined to be zero.
> I'm not a language lawyer, but I bel
On Feb 7, 2009, at 6:40 PM, Stephen Bannasch wrote:
I'm having a problem with Interface Builder seemingly corrupting an
xib file just by opening it and closing it.
./English.lproj/Preferences.xib
in IB and just save it (making no changes) the xib file appears
corrupted -- this invalid s
On 10 Feb 2009, at 10:15 am, Chris Hanson wrote:
Xcode will expand build settings in your Info.plist when it copies
it into your product.
This is a build setting that Xcode fills in by default when building
a target, not necessarily one Xcode provides UI for in the Build
tab. See the Xco
> You are definitely describing the behavior of the C++ preprocessor.
That behavior is also described at least as far back as Harbison & Steele
5th edtion 2002, and K&R 2nd edition 1988[*]. But I know for a fact that I
have used C compilers where #if with an undefined name was a compilation
error.
On Feb 9, 2009, at 3:17 PM, Sean McBride wrote:
Hi all,
Anyone know if NSSavePanel can be made to line wrap the text set with
its setMessage:? (That's the text it shows at the top of the panel.)
No, it can't; please log a feature request. Currently, it truncates
and ellipsizes.
corbin
Sorry, I misread your original posting. You're trying to make the
view transparent, not the window. Based on what you're seeing when
you set the view's backgroundColor, it looks like the alpha component
is being ignored. I would guess that either the IKImageView only
supports an opaque back
Yes - the interesting thing is, if I turn the grid on for the IKImageView,
it is plainly well able to recognise the transparency layer in my PNG and
render accordingly. We are overriding IKImageView already, although we're
not yet doing anything funky at all, just adding helper methods and handlin
Am 09.02.2009 um 22:46 Uhr schrieb I. Savant:
If all you want is a basic NSCollectionView-like widget that manages
a single column with homogenous subviews of arbitrary height, however,
the approach isn't trivial but it's not overly-difficult either.
Right. And, actually, I do have just such
On Mon, Feb 9, 2009 at 6:27 PM, Graham Cox wrote:
> I would still like to know why Xcode persists in making me perform this
> futile exercise every time I create a new project.
Have you tried deleting the com.apple.Xcode defaults domain?
___
Cocoa-dev
On Feb 9, 2009, at 5:27 PM, Graham Cox wrote:
Having changed the name of the project/executable/target/prefix file
from the annoying and incorrect defaults that Xcode inserted based
on another of my projects (why??? - that question still stands),
What Xcode actually builds is correct. If I
On 10/02/2009, at 10:30 AM, Christian Graus wrote:
Yes - the interesting thing is, if I turn the grid on for the
IKImageView,
it is plainly well able to recognise the transparency layer in my
PNG and
render accordingly. We are overriding IKImageView already, although
we're
not yet doing a
On Mon, Feb 9, 2009 at 2:11 PM, Steve Sisak wrote:
> At 12:41 PM -0500 2/9/09, Michael Ash wrote:
>>
>> > A very bad idea as it would force usage of float in 64bits applications
>>>
>>> where NSSize expect 64 bits CGFloat.
>>
>> So? Float converts to double just fine. There are no bad consequenc
On Mon, Feb 9, 2009 at 2:02 PM, Nick Zitzmann wrote:
>
> On Feb 9, 2009, at 11:04 AM, Sean McBride wrote:
>
>> I agree with the OP that CGFloat is very annoying in this respect. My
>> solution has been to use the 'f' suffix for constants.
>
> The problem with that is, if you do a mathematical ope
On Feb 9, 2009, at 6:30 PM, Michael Ash wrote:
Not really sure what you mean by this. It's true that a constant such
as 11.2f is a less precise representation of 11.2 than the non-float
version. But aside from actually defining the constants (and note that
all exact integers under 2^23 and many
On Feb 9, 2009, at 8:00 PM, Andreas Mayer wrote:
Right. And, actually, I do have just such a view. :)
http://www.harmless.de/cocoa-code.php#collectionview
There's even a sample app and a readme that should get you started.
Very nice, thanks for the link. I haven't checked out your page in
On 10/02/2009, at 3:09 AM, Eric Gorr wrote:
Am I correct in thinking that SKTText is essentially a complete (or
mostly complete) replacement of NSTextField?
Has anyone played around with SKTText enough to comment on what's
it's limitations are?
(And, if it is a replacement for NSTextFiel
On Feb 9, 2009, at 8:56 PM, Rob Keniger wrote:
On 10/02/2009, at 3:09 AM, Eric Gorr wrote:
Am I correct in thinking that SKTText is essentially a complete (or
mostly complete) replacement of NSTextField?
Has anyone played around with SKTText enough to comment on what's
it's limitations
My experiments suggest that simply setting the current document view
in an NSScrollView to a new size results in the unexpected behaviour
(to me) of having all the content of the document view be scaled up or
down to fit the size of the NSClipView.
If you construct new views that are the ap
The next Minnesota CocoaHeads meeting is this Thursday (2/12) from
6:00pm - 8:00pm. We meet at the offices of Synergy Information
Services in Bloomington.
Jon Steinmetz, from Adobe and Pixel Research Labs, will be giving a
technical walkthrough of his upcoming application. He will discuss his
Hey everyone!
The BYU CocoaHeads will be having their next meeting this Thursday at
7 pm in W210 of the Tanner Building on BYU campus (note that this is a
change from our previous location). We'll be talking about
ViewControllers, a student developer who just got his first app on the
App
On Feb 9, 2009, at 9:07 PM, Luke Evans wrote:
My experiments suggest that simply setting the current document view
in an NSScrollView to a new size results in the unexpected behaviour
(to me) of having all the content of the document view be scaled up
or down to fit the size of the NSClipV
On Mon, Feb 9, 2009 at 3:17 PM, Steve Sisak wrote:
> At 12:52 PM -0800 2/9/09, Clark Cox wrote:
>>
>> On Mon, Feb 9, 2009 at 12:10 PM, Sean McBride
>> wrote:
>> > On 2/9/09 11:24 AM, Clark Cox said:
>> >>That is, the preprocessor treats any undefined identifier in an '#if'
or '#elif"
Am 10.02.2009 um 02:00 Uhr schrieb Andreas Mayer:
Am 09.02.2009 um 22:46 Uhr schrieb I. Savant:
If all you want is a basic NSCollectionView-like widget that manages
a single column with homogenous subviews of arbitrary height,
however,
the approach isn't trivial but it's not overly-diffic
Folks;
I have a mix of view and image based toolbar items.
The views are all IBOutlets defined in IB.
Everything is working well - events are handled and items
arevalidated, everything is dandy.
Except when the user customizes the toolbar.
The image based items can be added and removed 'till
On Feb 9, 2009, at 9:26 PM, Eric Gorr wrote:
On Feb 9, 2009, at 9:07 PM, Luke Evans wrote:
My experiments suggest that simply setting the current document
view in an NSScrollView to a new size results in the unexpected
behaviour (to me) of having all the content of the document view be
sca
On Mon, Feb 9, 2009 at 8:55 PM, Nick Zitzmann wrote:
>
> On Feb 9, 2009, at 6:30 PM, Michael Ash wrote:
>
>> Not really sure what you mean by this. It's true that a constant such
>> as 11.2f is a less precise representation of 11.2 than the non-float
>> version. But aside from actually defining th
As I understand it, we are supposed to use FSReplaceObject because
FSExchangeObjects does not properly retain all meta-data.
But it seems like FSReplaceObject is not actually documented. Sure it is
mentioned here and there in release notes and so forth, but there is no actual
proper API documen
On Mon, Feb 9, 2009 at 5:57 PM, John Calhoun wrote:
> That is true. The PDFPage draw method is instead what is being called (in
> fact it is called both via printing and by the PDFView itself in order to
> display the PDF).
Okay, so at this point I guess I need to establish just what's going
on.
On Feb 9, 2009, at 8:46 PM, Chris Idou wrote:
As I understand it, we are supposed to use FSReplaceObject because
FSExchangeObjects does not properly retain all meta-data.
But it seems like FSReplaceObject is not actually documented. Sure
it is mentioned here and there in release notes and
On Sat, 7 Feb 2009 21:06:20 -0800, Seth Willits said:
>On Feb 7, 2009, at 8:45 PM, Matt Neuburg wrote:
>
>>> In my case, I have a document window with a table view in it, where
>>> data source and delegate are the window controller. If the window is
>>> oneShot NO, then the window controller is de
i once tried creating an IKImageBrowser as a HUD window but that
caused some crazy problems with dragging images (or was it dragging
the imagebrowser?) because the background of the window wasn't opaque.
On Mon, Feb 9, 2009 at 8:24 PM, Rob Keniger wrote:
>
> On 10/02/2009, at 10:30 AM, Christian
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