On Nov 26, 2011, at 7:06 PM, Scott Ribe wrote:
> I think what you had before would work for the byte swap & conversion,
> assuming that your "result" was an array of floats; CFSwapInt32HostToBig is
> not really the right call--when it works it is by accident.
Thanks again Scott for thinking al
Hi All.
Is there a way to load a custom map (instead of Google map) in the MKMapView
component?
Thanks.
Luca.___
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On Nov 27, 2011, at 6:06 AM, Koen van der Drift wrote:
> Again giving the same expected results. Would this be the correct call, or
> am I still missing something?
The purpose of casting? I think you need to review a C reference, you're
casting a uint32_t to uint32_t * then back to uint32_t. I
Many thanks for your replies, Jens and Ken.
I use the mouseMoved event to set the mouse cursor according to whether a
NSBezierPath instance contains the mouse point [pathInstance containsPoint:],
to indicate whether the path can be moved. There is no scale transformation on
the view. On the
On 27 Nov 2011, at 7:17 AM, Luca Ciciriello wrote:
> Is there a way to load a custom map (instead of Google map) in the MKMapView
> component?
No.
However, you could define an MKOverlayView that completely overwrites the
standard view. I'm not sure how much that gets you above defining your ow
On Nov 27, 2011, at 10:02 AM, Scott Ribe wrote:
> The purpose of casting? I think you need to review a C reference, you're
> casting a uint32_t to uint32_t * then back to uint32_t. In prior code you
> were casting something (unsigned char * ???) to uint32_t *, then
> dereferencing it, which wo
On Sat, Nov 19, 2011 at 6:49 PM, Roland King wrote:
>
> On Nov 20, 2011, at 5:48 AM, Jerry Krinock wrote:
>
>>
>> On 2011 Nov 16, at 17:16, Tom Harrington wrote:
>>
>>> I'm finding that if I use nested managed object contexts,
>>> awakeFromInsert will be called twice on new objects.
>>
>>> I'm won
On Sun, Nov 20, 2011 at 2:34 PM, Richard Somers
wrote:
> On Nov 16, 2011, at 6:16 PM, Tom Harrington wrote:
>
>> I'm finding that if I use nested managed object contexts,
>> awakeFromInsert will be called twice on new objects.
>
>
> On Mac OS X 10.7 NSManagedObjectContext can have a parentContext.
On Nov 27, 2011, at 16:49 , Tom Harrington wrote:
> Actually I don't, so far as I can tell. As I mentioned in my previous
> message, I get the same managed object ID both times. I haven't
> checked the address, but surely if they were different objects they
> wouldn't have the same ID.
You're wro
On Sun, Nov 27, 2011 at 6:09 PM, Quincey Morris
wrote:
> On Nov 27, 2011, at 16:49 , Tom Harrington wrote:
>
> Actually I don't, so far as I can tell. As I mentioned in my previous
> message, I get the same managed object ID both times. I haven't
> checked the address, but surely if they were diff
On Nov 27, 2011, at 20:50 , Tom Harrington wrote:
> If they're different objects then I'm getting duplicates, which is at
> least as much of a bug and possibly more so. What I observe is that if
> I add 10 objects, I get 20 calls to awakeFromInsert, 10 for the child
> context and 10 for the parent
On Nov 27, 2011, at 9:23 PM, Quincey Morris
wrote:
> On Nov 27, 2011, at 20:50 , Tom Harrington wrote:
>
>> If they're different objects then I'm getting duplicates, which is at
>> least as much of a bug and possibly more so. What I observe is that if
>> I add 10 objects, I get 20 calls to awak
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