Hi All,
I've written a parser which can natively parse any Unicode encoding form
(UTF-8, UTF16 BE/LE, UTF-32 BE/LE). It takes iterators as input parameters,
that is (const) pointers to uint8_t, uint16t and uint32_t which are selected
according the Unicode encoding form of the given input text.
On Jun 17, 2011, at 2:46 AM, Andreas Grosam wrote:
> I've written a parser which can natively parse any Unicode encoding form
> (UTF-8, UTF16 BE/LE, UTF-32 BE/LE). It takes iterators as input parameters,
> that is (const) pointers to uint8_t, uint16t and uint32_t which are selected
> according
On Jun 17, 2011, at 00:46, Andreas Grosam wrote:
> Given an NSString as input source, what is the fastest method to "feed" the
> parser?
As usual, Ken's answer is better than the one I was composing, but I don't
think *any* answer is of use to you unless you specify what representation your
pa
Thank you Ken, for your valuable tips,
On Jun 17, 2011, at 10:40 AM, Ken Thomases wrote:
> On Jun 17, 2011, at 2:46 AM, Andreas Grosam wrote:
>
>> Given an NSString as input source, what is the fastest method to "feed" the
>> parser?
>>
>> Also worth mentioning is the possible fact about hidd
Hi, thanks,
it works. But now I get a new trouble:
If I set setHasHorizontalScroller:NO, any scrollPoint: I call
programmatically is not seen by the next drag.
In details:
within the method endGestureWithEvent: I call
NSLog(@"endGesture %@", NSStringFromPoint([mClipView bounds].origin));
/
On Jun 17, 2011, at 11:05 AM, Quincey Morris wrote:
> On Jun 17, 2011, at 00:46, Andreas Grosam wrote:
>
>> Given an NSString as input source, what is the fastest method to "feed" the
>> parser?
>
> As usual, Ken's answer is better than the one I was composing, but I don't
> think *any* answe
Thanks guys
Depends on what you mean by "everyone" ... ?
>
> QTMovieView and NSMovieView and the likes have built-in controllers that
> you can just use out of the box. Many places use that, however they look
> kinda 10.4-ish. If you want some of the more modern looks (either like
> Spotlight ha
I have an app with six (6) text fields. I need to know when the text in any of
the text fields has changed so I can process them as a group.
AppDelegate .h
@interface WK2CFGMacAppDelegate : NSObject {
outlets
}
actions
- (void) textDidChange:(NSNotification *)aNotification;
AppDelegate.
Try controlTextDidChange
Am 17.06.2011 um 16:11 schrieb JAMES ROGERS:
> I have an app with six (6) text fields. I need to know when the text in any
> of the text fields has changed so I can process them as a group.
>
> AppDelegate .h
> @interface WK2CFGMacAppDelegate : NSObject NSTextFieldDele
Wow! That was easy. Thank You!
Jim
On Jun 17, 2011, at 9:21 AM, Alexander Reichstadt wrote:
> Try controlTextDidChange
>
> Am 17.06.2011 um 16:11 schrieb JAMES ROGERS:
>
>> I have an app with six (6) text fields. I need to know when the text in any
>> of the text fields has changed so I can pr
On Jun 17, 2011, at 3:35 AM, Andreas Grosam wrote:
> If possible, I would prefer to avoid any conversions performed by NSString as
> a result of accessing the content in any way. The parser is capable to parse
> any Unicode encoding form, so if possible, I just would take the NSString's
> cont
On Jun 17, 2011, at 04:19, Andreas Grosam wrote:
> It does not convert at all. It can understand any Unicode encoding form,
> though.
Ah, OK, I misunderstood you to mean "parsing" in relation to the Unicode
representation itself. That's not as silly as it sounds, because it's not
entirely triv
On Jun 16, 2011, at 7:15 PM, G S wrote:
> The delegate for the UIWebView is set up in the XIB file; it's pretty
> hokey to have to intervene in code to then disassociate the view from
> its delegate. Also, there is no "dealloc method where you dispose of
> the UIWebView", because that's done auto
On 17 Jun 2011, at 00:18, Uli Kusterer wrote:
On 17.06.2011, at 03:08, Ken Tozier wrote:
On Jun 16, 2011, at 12:34 PM, Stephen Blinkhorn wrote:
A quick test on a 2GHz iMac takes at least twice as long 4.5
seconds to generate a 10,000 X 10,000 CGLayer of noise.
Stephen
Thanks. Difference
I have what seems like an excellent use case for NSCache, only it doesn’t have
quite the behavior I need. And I’m having trouble thinking of how to tweak it
to get that behavior.
In a nutshell: I want the cache to evict only objects that have no other
references to them. So as long as something
On Jun 17, 2011, at 9:40 AM, Jens Alfke wrote:
> Basically this is a cache of database records, where the dictionary key is
> the primary key and the value is a parsed version of the row data. I want to
> cache these to minimize database calls. I also want to ensure that the value
> objects are
On Jun 17, 2011, at 11:28 AM, Chris Hanson wrote:
> Rather than reinventing all of this yourself, you should just use Core Data.
> It provides both the uniquing and the database call minimization you're
> looking for, and a lot else besides.
This is for an Objective-C API to CouchDB, not to sql
Hi,
I am working on a kext based on SoundFlower and have used the source from
http:[//]anonymous@soundflower [dot] googlecode [dot] com[/]svn
However i am not able to use the standard c++ library. The compiler throws error
#include gives error-> iostream: no such file or directory.
However if i c
One of my user sent me a crash log with an excerpt here:
...
Exception Type: EXC_BAD_ACCESS (SIGSEGV)
Exception Codes: KERN_INVALID_ADDRESS at 0x0027
...
Thread 4 Crashed: Dispatch queue: com.apple.root.default-priority
0 libobjc.A.dylib 0x7fff85ea115c objc_
Your question is not related to Cocoa. You should either ask on the
xcode-users forum, or in a forum related to SoundFlower.
--Kyle Sluder
On Fri, Jun 17, 2011 at 2:31 PM, Alex Flecher wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I am working on a kext based on SoundFlower and have used the source from
> http:[//]anonymous
On Jun 17, 2011, at 2:40 PM, Laurent Daudelin wrote:
> One of my user sent me a crash log with an excerpt here:
>
> ...
> Exception Type: EXC_BAD_ACCESS (SIGSEGV)
> Exception Codes: KERN_INVALID_ADDRESS at 0x0027
> ...
> Thread 4 Crashed: Dispatch queue: com.apple.root.default-priori
On Jun 17, 2011, at 15:22, Greg Parker wrote:
> On Jun 17, 2011, at 2:40 PM, Laurent Daudelin wrote:
>> One of my user sent me a crash log with an excerpt here:
>>
>> ...
>> Exception Type: EXC_BAD_ACCESS (SIGSEGV)
>> Exception Codes: KERN_INVALID_ADDRESS at 0x0027
>> ...
>> Thread 4
On Jun 17, 2011, at 3:48 PM, Laurent Daudelin wrote:
> On Jun 17, 2011, at 15:22, Greg Parker wrote:
>
>> On Jun 17, 2011, at 2:40 PM, Laurent Daudelin wrote:
>>> One of my user sent me a crash log with an excerpt here:
>>>
>>> ...
>>> Exception Type: EXC_BAD_ACCESS (SIGSEGV)
>>> Exception Cod
On 17 Jun 2011, at 10:30, Stephen Blinkhorn wrote:
Saying that, I've found that the CPU requirements of the raw drawing
code (even with relatively fast refresh rates of 20-25 FPS) pales
into insignificance when compared to the objective-c messaging
overhead of co-ordinating the redrawing.
On Jun 17, 2011, at 15:51, Greg Parker wrote:
> On Jun 17, 2011, at 3:48 PM, Laurent Daudelin wrote:
>
>> On Jun 17, 2011, at 15:22, Greg Parker wrote:
>>
>>> On Jun 17, 2011, at 2:40 PM, Laurent Daudelin wrote:
One of my user sent me a crash log with an excerpt here:
...
Ex
That seems a bit strange - have you put the code up somewhere?
Scott
On Fri, Jun 17, 2011 at 4:24 PM, Stephen Blinkhorn
wrote:
>
> On 17 Jun 2011, at 10:30, Stephen Blinkhorn wrote:
>
>> Saying that, I've found that the CPU requirements of the raw drawing code
>> (even with relatively fast refre
Keying off Stephen's idea of drawing noise quickly, I came up with a solution
that I can use for my own purposes. It seems like splitting up large image
manipulations for execution on different processor cores could be a good
introduction to GCD and blocks. I read the intro to GCD docs but am st
On 17 Jun 2011, at 19:45, Scott Ellsworth wrote:
That seems a bit strange - have you put the code up somewhere?
No, not yet. I might post something here over the weekend. It's
puzzled me a bit for a year or so off and on now.
Stephen
Scott
On Fri, Jun 17, 2011 at 4:24 PM, Stephen Blink
Super late reply here, but I just tried that and it still doesn't work. It
seems to work every now and then randomly but other times it doesn't work at
all. Sounds like some sort of timing issue.
On 2011-05-18, at 1:04 AM, Josh Abernathy wrote:
> Try doing the animation one runloop after callin
Hey List,
I'm writing a little app for myself to take a database full of text and format
it into either a Word Document or an RTF document (either one is fine for my
purposes). I've got it working for small datasets, but I'm running in to
performance issues when trying to generate files larger
Is there some reason the text needs to be RTF? Is it just that you want to view
this text formatted nicely at a future date? Or do you plan on distributing the
monster RTF?
If it's just nicely formatted text you're after would HTML with CSS serve just
as well? If so, you could write an aggregat
On Jun 17, 2011, at 10:15 PM, Ken Tozier wrote:
> Is there some reason the text needs to be RTF? Is it just that you want to
> view this text formatted nicely at a future date? Or do you plan on
> distributing the monster RTF?
It needs to be editable after the fact.
Dave
_
On Jun 18, 2011, at 1:18 AM, Dave DeLong wrote:
> It needs to be editable after the fact.
>
> Dave
>
It is. If you open such a file in Word, it just looks like styled text. You can
edit it and save it as html or RTF. Whichever you prefer. Try saving the
following to a plain text file, op
Fair enough. This is certainly a great alternative to stripping out the
document level attributes, but I'd still prefer the format to be as "native" as
possible. Using HTML like this feels a bit kludgey.
Dave
Sent from my iPhone
On Jun 17, 2011, at 10:45 PM, Ken Tozier wrote:
>
> On Jun 18
Hello.
I'm building a Cocoa application and have a question about using
window controllers. The idea is that when the user selects New from
the File menu, an instance of MyWindowController which is a subclass
of NSWindowController is created and a new window from MyWindow.xib is
displayed.
I'm ha
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On Jun 16, 2011, at 12:33 PM, Bing Li wrote:
> Dear Conrad, Jens, Tony, Scott, Wade and all,
>
> I appreciate so much for your replies. I learn a lot from the interactions
> with you. Since I am new, your patience is so valuable to me!
>
> I just got the problem. At least, right now, there is n
Hi,
I want to create a Tab Bar based iPad App. I would like it so that you tap
on one of the tab bar buttons and a Table View comes up in the view area for
that button as a Navigation Menu, you would tap the table cell to get to
whatever media/etc is attached to that cell in the table. (Imagine th
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