On Nov 11, 2010, at 8:13 AM, Shane wrote:
> I've got an NSOperation thread running, but I'd like to be able to
> send a message to it so that the thread can be shut it down, or
> possibly other commands.
>
> What is considered a good way to send a message to an NSOperation
> thread from the apps
On 11 Nov 2010, at 07:13, Shane wrote:
> I've got an NSOperation thread running, but I'd like to be able to
> send a message to it so that the thread can be shut it down, or
> possibly other commands.
>
> What is considered a good way to send a message to an NSOperation
> thread from the apps ma
On 10 Nov 2010, at 17:54, Shawn Bakhtiar wrote:
> Only those who have actually signed an NDA with Apple are subject to this,
> and they are certainly free to refrain from comment.
>
> Everyone else is free to talk, blog, and post about it how they please.
Perhaps you could refrain from giving i
On 10 Nov 2010, at 19:00, Laurent Daudelin wrote:
> Note: I am not an Apple's employee and have agreed/signed all NDAs.
>
> Now, although I agree with the above comment from Scott, if you haven't
> signed an NDA specifically with Apple, how do you know when you're talking
> about something that
I find this issue very puzzling.
I read a plist dictionary containing one ony key-value: an NSData coming a
RTFD string. I read this value, I do NO changes, then I re-save it to a
different plist file, and now the 2 files are different. I have inspected
these 2 plist files with TextWrangler, and t
On 11 Nov 2010, at 11:57, gMail.com wrote:
> I find this issue very puzzling.
>
> I read a plist dictionary containing one ony key-value: an NSData coming a
> RTFD string. I read this value, I do NO changes, then I re-save it to a
> different plist file, and now the 2 files are different. I have
Hallo Jerry
Thanks a lot. You got me going ...
Here's what I did:
defaultCenter = [NSNotificationCenter defaultCenter];
[defaultCenter addObserver:self
selector:@selector(clipviewFrameChanged:)
name:NSViewFrameDidChangeNotification
Op 10-11-2010 15:31, Quincey Morris schreef:
On Nov 10, 2010, at 06:10, jonat...@mugginsoft.com wrote:
I was just thinking that the overrides would provide a convenient point to
process all requests for undefined properties.
Depends on the design and requirements of the model I suppose.
I do
On 11/11/2010, at 11:41 PM, Remco Poelstra wrote:
> Leaves me wondering whether I should hardcode all properties (82 items) on my
> own object or try to make a more intelligent subclass of NSMutableDictionary.
> Or maybe a composite object?
If the requirement is simply to distinguish between
On 11 Nov 2010, at 12:41, Remco Poelstra wrote:
> Op 10-11-2010 15:31, Quincey Morris schreef:
>> On Nov 10, 2010, at 06:10, jonat...@mugginsoft.com wrote:
>>
>>> I was just thinking that the overrides would provide a convenient point to
>>> process all requests for undefined properties.
>>> D
Op 11-11-2010 13:48, Graham Cox schreef:
On 11/11/2010, at 11:41 PM, Remco Poelstra wrote:
Leaves me wondering whether I should hardcode all properties (82 items) on my
own object or try to make a more intelligent subclass of NSMutableDictionary.
Or maybe a composite object?
If the requir
On 12/11/2010, at 12:01 AM, Remco Poelstra wrote:
> Seems so :) I just tried that and observing the change of properties is now
> non-functional, as the request for observing is not forwarded to the
> NSDictionary behind my own object. Seems I've to override a whole lot of
> methods to forward
Op 11-11-2010 14:11, Graham Cox schreef:
On 12/11/2010, at 12:01 AM, Remco Poelstra wrote:
Seems so :) I just tried that and observing the change of properties is now
non-functional, as the request for observing is not forwarded to the
NSDictionary behind my own object. Seems I've to overrid
It seems to me that NSTextView can do everything that NSTextField can and more.
For example, on a NSTextView, one can use the method setHorizontallyResizable:
and then call sizeToFit to get it to resize itself vertically instead of
horizontally.
Is this correct?
If so and if I am programmatica
RTFDFromRange returns different data even if I do not change the variables
mTextMutableString nor mDocAttributes. I just call several time:
NSData *textData = [mTextMutableString RTFDFromRange:textRange
documentAttributes:mDocAttributes];
NSLog(@"textData %@", textData);
And 'every time' I get a
LinkedIn
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--
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- amit
Accept invitation from amit jain
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On Nov 11, 2010, at 8:12 AM, gMail.com wrote:
> RTFDFromRange returns different data even if I do not change the variables
> mTextMutableString nor mDocAttributes. I just call several time:
>
> NSData *textData = [mTextMutableString RTFDFromRange:textRange
> documentAttributes:mDocAttributes];
On Nov 11, 2010, at 10:35 AM, jonat...@mugginsoft.com wrote:
>
> On 11 Nov 2010, at 07:13, Shane wrote:
>
>> I've got an NSOperation thread running, but I'd like to be able to
>> send a message to it so that the thread can be shut it down, or
>> possibly other commands.
>>
>> What is considere
Wow I am so sorry I posted to this forum. I thought this was a forum for
engineers, but turns out everyone on it is a lawyer.
I fat fingered a 2 instead of a 1 in the subject field and ended up with a
bunch of emails about legal agreements.
btw, if there are any engineers out there who are int
On Nov 11, 2010, at 9:39 AM, colors wrote:
> Wow I am so sorry I posted to this forum. I thought this was a forum for
> engineers, but turns out everyone on it is a lawyer.
>
> I fat fingered a 2 instead of a 1 in the subject field and ended up with a
> bunch of emails about legal agreements.
On 11 Nov 2010, at 14:50, Steve Bird wrote:
>
> On Nov 11, 2010, at 9:39 AM, colors wrote:
>
>> Wow I am so sorry I posted to this forum. I thought this was a forum for
>> engineers, but turns out everyone on it is a lawyer.
>>
>> I fat fingered a 2 instead of a 1 in the subject field and en
> If so and if I am programmatically creating one of these controls, is there
> any reason why I would want to use a NSTextField?
> (I know that IB uses a NSTextField for Labels, for example...is this just a
> historical artifact?)
For editing multiple strings it is more efficient to have multip
On 11 Nov 2010, at 14:37, Andreas Grosam wrote:
>
>> You have to do a bit more management but you get the control you need.
> IMHO, using NSOperation/NSOperationQueue is exactly what I consider a higher
> level API. It has also additional cool features which give you even more
> control where N
NSTextField doesn't display or edit text at all. It uses an instance of
NSTextView calle dthe "filed editor" to provide all text dispay and editing.
So you are right: NSTextFiled cannot do anythingthat NSTextView can't because
NSTextField uses NSTextView.
NSTextView is a large and heavy weigh
Change Filed to Field where appropriate. Grumble...auto-correct...grumble.
--- On Thu, 11/11/10, Erik Buck wrote:
> From: Erik Buck
> Subject: Re: NSTextView vs NSTextField
> To: "Cocoa Dev" , "Eric Gorr"
>
> Date: Thursday, November 11, 2010, 10:50 AM
> NSTextField doesn't display or edit
>
Thanks for the info (both you and Ross).
You may be interested in: http://damnyouautocorrect.com/
On Nov 11, 2010, at 10:54 AM, Erik Buck wrote:
> Change Filed to Field where appropriate. Grumble...auto-correct...grumble.
>
> --- On Thu, 11/11/10, Erik Buck wrote:
>
>> From: Erik Buck
>>
On Nov 11, 2010, at 7:11 AM, Graham Cox wrote:
> Just write a wrapper for -setObject:forKey: and -valueForKey: The first just
> calls the same method on its (mutable) dictionary, the second can first check
> for whether the value is actually present and if not kick off some task to
> fetch it,
On Nov 11, 2010, at 4:29 AM, Patrick Mau wrote:
> After all the setup, I add an observer to the NSClipView
> that is the scrollvies's contentView.
NSTableView already does this exact thing when it is set up properly. There
should be no need for you to do this yourself.
>
> The corresponding s
Somehow NSSecureTextFieldCell is receiving a nil field editor in
-selectWithFrame:... or -editWithFrame:.
Aki
On 2010/11/10, at 10:21, FF wrote:
> A NSSecureTextField works fine, but the msg. in the Console after entering
> password says:
> NSSecureTextFieldCell detected a field editor ((null)
Greetings LA CocoaHeads.
Tonight we have our monthly meeting. We don't have a formal presentation
planned, but we'll have an informal discussion of recent Apple announcements
such as the new Mac App store, upcoming features in 10.7 "Lion", and general
Q&A about Mac and iDevice development.
(
On Nov 11, 2010, at 4:48 PM, jonat...@mugginsoft.com wrote:
>> In case you would like to do similar things when using NSOperation and
>> NSOperationQueue you might consider to send the message to the run loop
>> instead, e.g.: -performSelector:target:argument:order:modes:
>>
>> Of course you w
On 11 Nov 2010, at 20:06, Andreas Grosam wrote:
>
> On Nov 11, 2010, at 4:48 PM, jonat...@mugginsoft.com wrote:
>
>>> In case you would like to do similar things when using NSOperation and
>>> NSOperationQueue you might consider to send the message to the run loop
>>> instead, e.g.: -perform
Thank you Glenn. Me too I thought of a time stamp because
I tried to call that function several times with 1 second interval and the
data was different by 1, then 2, then 3...
I workedaround the problem archiving the data directly from the
attributedString this way:
NSData* stringData = [NSKeyedA
On 12/11/2010, at 3:30 AM, Ken Thomases wrote:
> You should not override -setValue:forKey: or -valueForKey: if you can avoid
> it. Instead, implement the methods -setValue:forUndefinedKey: and
> -valueForUndefinedKey:. They are precisely for implementing "dynamic"
> properties in this manner
On Thu, Nov 11, 2010 at 2:57 PM, Graham Cox wrote:
> Understood, but the OP's problem as I understand it is that it's not that the
> key is undefined, but the value associated with it is uninitialized. So
> rather than return nil, or zero, he wants to trigger a remote fetch of the
> value. KVC
Did something recently change with sharedHTTPCookieStorage no longer sharing
session cookies?
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Contact the moderators
On Nov 11, 2010, at 2:57 PM, Graham Cox wrote:
>
> On 12/11/2010, at 3:30 AM, Ken Thomases wrote:
>
>> You should not override -setValue:forKey: or -valueForKey: if you can avoid
>> it. Instead, implement the methods -setValue:forUndefinedKey: and
>> -valueForUndefinedKey:. They are precise
Thanks Aki.
The problem vanished after redoing the password panel. Pity that still I don't
know the source of the problem : -(
Jack.
Begin forwarded message:
> From: Aki Inoue
> Date: November 11, 2010 12:55:58 PM EST
> To: FF
> Cc: cocoa-dev@lists.apple.com
> Subject: Re: NSSecureTextFieldC
On Nov 11, 2010, at 4:57 PM, Graham Cox wrote:
> On 12/11/2010, at 3:30 AM, Ken Thomases wrote:
>
>> You should not override -setValue:forKey: or -valueForKey: if you can avoid
>> it. Instead, implement the methods -setValue:forUndefinedKey: and
>> -valueForUndefinedKey:. They are precisely f
On 12/11/2010, at 12:45 AM, Eric Gorr wrote:
> It seems to me that NSTextView can do everything that NSTextField can and
> more. For example, on a NSTextView, one can use the method
> setHorizontallyResizable: and then call sizeToFit to get it to resize itself
> vertically instead of horizonta
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