Hi All,
I'm trying to find documentation about what the various bindings in IB actually
do. If I look at the documentation for NSArrayController (or any controller)
and NSPopUpButton (or any UI control) I don't find what I'm looking for.
In general, where is there a description of the various b
On May 2, 2010, at 5:14 AM, Brian Bruinewoud wrote:
> I'm trying to find documentation about what the various bindings in IB
> actually do. If I look at the documentation for NSArrayController (or any
> controller) and NSPopUpButton (or any UI control) I don't find what I'm
> looking for.
http
Hi.
I have two entities: Mission and Favorite. Favorite has a single relation to
Mission. I need to fetch all Mission objects that exist in Favorite. I'm using
an NSFetchResultsController.
I created an array with all the Mission objects found in the Favorite entity.
Then I tried to create a pr
I saw that, I had hoped that by not specifying an attribute, it would mean the
object itself, not an attribute on the object.
On May 2, 2010, at 05:58:39, Frederick Reimer wrote:
> The manuals for this give the following example:
>
> NSPredicate *inPredicate =
> [NSPredicate predic
What about making the rect your view's actual bounds. Something like...
CGRect footerBounds = [footerView bounds];
CGRect footerRectInTable = [tableView convertRect:footerBounds
fromView:footerView];
[tableView scrollToRect:footerRectInTable animated:YES];
This should scroll to the footer view
On May 2, 2010, at 6:03 AM, Rick Mann wrote:
> I saw that, I had hoped that by not specifying an attribute, it would mean
> the object itself, not an attribute on the object.
Predicates have the “self” keyword for that.
— Chris
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Thanks, everyone, for telling me about "self."
On May 2, 2010, at 14:53:09, Frederick Reimer wrote:
> Wrong assumption; you would actually use "SELF" in a format string, as it is
> a reserved word. So @"SELF IN %@"
>
> I think...
>
>
> Fred Reimer, CCIE 23812 CISSP 107125
> mailto:frei...@fr
The Finder is able to keep both a SourceView and a Table view active at the
same time... Both highlight in the "active" mode as long as the window is
active. The Table seems to always have the keyboard focus.
How can I achieve the same thing in my app without resorting to custom
drawing?
Thanks,
On Apr 30, 2010, at 5:08 AM, steven Hooley wrote:
>> The information I am getting back from advancementForGlyph doesn't
>> seem to be correct. Here are the glyph bounds and advancement for
>> the capital letter 'A' in Georgia 36pt:
>>
>> == A ==
>> bounds x: -0.720703
>> bounds y: 0.00
>> b
On Apr 30, 2010, at 7:20 AM, Graham Cox wrote:
>
> On 30/04/2010, at 9:08 PM, steven Hooley wrote:
>
>>> From your later response it seems like your question is really
>> regarding drawing strikethroughs and underlines. If so, the strike
>> through and underline are not part of the glyph or fon
On Apr 30, 2010, at 10:37 AM, Dale Miller wrote:
> For character measurements, if you are using the Cocoa text system, use the
> font returned by the NSLayoutManager method "subtituteFontForFont:" in order
> to get the screen font used by Cocoa text. However, experimentally, I found
> that for
If a director is compressed in the Finder, and added to an app's
resources, and the app wants to copy the compressed director to a
location and uncompress the directory what is the correct process.
I have done unzip and uncompress as NSTask but neither yields the
result as if the compresse
I just got kick/banned from #macdev and #iphondev. I was asking an
exceptionally complicated NSStream question in #iphonedev, and though
I got a lot of pseudo-answers, nobody really even understood the
question to begin with; I hand't even gotten far enough in physically
typing out the text explain
Hi Patrick,
This mailing list is not the place for you to grind your axe. It's where we
ask questions and provide answers.
I'd also just like to point out that excessive profanity and abusive language
is a ban-worthy offense, as outlined in the terms and conditions you agreed to
when signing
I'd ban you just for your language personally. The run on sentences
and half thought out bad logic aside.
Sent from my iPhone
On May 2, 2010, at 7:30 PM, "Patrick M. Rutkowski"
wrote:
I just got kick/banned from #macdev and #iphondev. I was asking an
exceptionally complicated NSStream q
Sorry, this is all just really frustrating, and I guess I was running
under the false assumption that #macdev/#iphone and the mailing lists
are the same user community :-/
My apologies for the language. Your right, I shouldn't have posted
this to the list at all.
-Patrick
On Sun, May 2, 2010 at
They're separate in the sense that this mailing list is hosted and moderated by
Apple, and #macdev and #iphone are not. However, I wouldn't be surprised if
there's quite a bit of crossover between this community and the IRC community.
If you're interested, you may also consider checking out Sta
Patrick,
There are alternative channels on FreeNode to discuss Mac/iPhone
development. You might give #macosxdev a shot since it seems to have
developers in it who know what they're doing and are relatively nice.
GC
On Sun, May 2, 2010 at 10:45 PM, Patrick M. Rutkowski
wrote:
> Sorry, this is
Hi all,
I've been working on a tool to print an NSView to a PDF file. I followed
Apple's documentation but couldn't get the auto-pagination work.
The resulting PDF file is always long and one-page. Hope someone with
relevant experience could help me. My code is as follows:
MyCustomView *curView
I should also mention that the alternative on FreeNode for the iPhone
development instead of #iphonedev is #iphone. My recommendation is to
go there and to #macosxdev instead of #macdev if you want actual
questions answered.
I'm saying this from experience. :)
GC
On Sun, May 2, 2010 at 10:54 PM
On May 2, 2010, at 7:09 PM, k...@highrolls.net wrote:
> I have done unzip and uncompress as NSTask but neither yields the result as
> if the compressed directory was double-clicked in the Finder.
The Finder creates a standard zip archive, so ‘unzip’ is the right task to run
via NSTask.
> Spec
Issues with IRC are not directly related to cocoa development and do not belong
here.
please take these issues elsewhere.
On May 2, 2010, at 10:30 PM, Patrick M. Rutkowski wrote:
> I just got kick/banned from #macdev and #iphondev. I was asking an
> exceptionally complicated NSStream question
Having re-read your note, and noticed the language that was pointed out, you
have been moderated on this list.
This is not the appropriate location for such language.
On May 2, 2010, at 10:30 PM, Patrick M. Rutkowski wrote:
> I just got kick/banned from #macdev and #iphondev. I was asking an
>
and this is what I get for posting at 2:30 on a Sunday night
I’m of course the [Moderator] not modeator.
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Contact the moderator
if by footer view, you mean content that is at the end of a table view, I
suggest you read the UIScrollView Guide, specifically the issues regarding
contentOffset.
On May 2, 2010, at 11:14 AM, Scott Andrew wrote:
> What about making the rect your view's actual bounds. Something like...
>
> C
contentSize is the correct way to do this. It gives a ‘buffer zone’ at the top
and bottom (and sides if you wish) on the scroll view.
On May 1, 2010, at 11:04 PM, Luke the Hiesterman wrote:
> UITableView is a subclass of UIScrollView. So, you can ask for its
> contentSize and then call scrollR
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