On Oct 27, 2012, at 6:02 PM, Jens Alfke wrote:
> In general, initialization code like this in a nib-loaded object should go
> into its -awakeFromNib method, which is [almost] guaranteed to be the first
> method invoked on that object.
Actually, the NSTableView docs explicitly warn that this is
I have confirmed that the viewcontroller property is set correctly. While
trying to find out why the textfield alignment isn't updated accordingly
through the binding, I have found that when I set the textfield's stringValue
(eg. to the same string), the alignment does get updated to its correct
ok, it looks like i've sorted the original problem. but here's the next one:
i have this line:
for (i = 0; i++; i < count) {…}
in the app delegate. Xcode keeps giving me this warning: expression result
unused. WTF? that is correct syntax for a for loop, isn't it? so then why do i
keep getting
On 28 Oct, 2012, at 7:50 PM, H Miersch wrote:
> ok, it looks like i've sorted the original problem. but here's the next one:
>
> i have this line:
>
> for (i = 0; i++; i < count) {…}
>
> in the app delegate. Xcode keeps giving me this warning: expression result
> unused. WTF? that is correct
On Oct 28, 2012, at 7:50 AM, H Miersch wrote:
> for (i = 0; i++; i < count) {…}
That should be for (i=0; i < count; i++) {} ;-)
- Koen.
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then why does Xcode complain about an unused result? this is just another
example of a TOTALLY USELESS error message.
anyway, i fixed it, and now it works. thanks.
On 28. Oct 2012, at 11:56, Roland King wrote:
>
> On 28 Oct, 2012, at 7:50 PM, H Miersch wrote:
>
>> ok, it looks like i've so
On 28 Oct, 2012, at 12:50 , H Miersch wrote:
> ok, it looks like i've sorted the original problem. but here's the next one:
>
> i have this line:
>
> for (i = 0; i++; i < count) {…}
>
> in the app delegate. Xcode keeps giving me this warning: expression result
> unused. WTF? that is correct s
On 28 Oct, 2012, at 8:01 PM, H Miersch wrote:
> then why does Xcode complain about an unused result? this is just another
> example of a TOTALLY USELESS error message.
>
> anyway, i fixed it, and now it works. thanks.
>
> On 28. Oct 2012, at 11:56, Roland King wrote:
>
>>
>> On 28 Oct, 20
On 28 Oct 2012, at 01:18, M Pulis wrote:
> clients is not (yet) a proper NSMutableArray..
>
> Try one of the init methods within the NSMutableArray.
I'm sorry? -init is a perfectly reasonable method to call here.
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On Oct 27, 2012, at 6:04 PM, Paul Johnson wrote:
> I get a compiler warning message at the following line of code:
>
> NSString *text =
(Sorry again if the list gets this twice. I am going to strangle whoever
thought it was a good idea to give me a me.com address as an alias for my
mac.com address -- AND have Mail.app use one when I meant the other.)
On Oct 28, 2012, at 12:04 PM, Andy Lee wrote:
> I Googled "Rf_error" and ther
Thanks, Nick and Gary. You are absolutely right. I found 'error' is being
defined in a 3rd-party framework I'm using.
Then there is the question of how to work around this, so I can use the
NSString class method. If you can suggest a solution I would be grateful.
On Sat, Oct 27, 2012 at 7:41 PM,
On Oct 28, 2012, at 10:23 AM, Paul Johnson wrote:
> Thanks, Nick and Gary. You are absolutely right. I found 'error' is being
> defined in a 3rd-party framework I'm using.
>
> Then there is the question of how to work around this, so I can use the
> NSString class method. If you can suggest a so
On Oct 28, 2012, at 10:37 , Kyle Sluder wrote:
> No matter what you do, file a bug with the 3rd-party framework. Their macros
> should not leak.
The thing that bothers me is why macros should be substituting into method
parameter names at all. It potentially brings *pieces* of method names int
On Oct 28, 2012, at 1:37 AM, Kyle Sluder wrote:
>> In general, initialization code like this in a nib-loaded object should go
>> into its -awakeFromNib method, which is [almost] guaranteed to be the first
>> method invoked on that object.
>
> Actually, the NSTableView docs explicitly warn tha
On Oct 28, 2012, at 11:03 AM, Quincey Morris
wrote:
> The thing that bothers me is why macros should be substituting into method
> parameter names at all.
The preprocessor barely knows anything about C syntax, let alone Obj-C.
Remember, it’s running before the parser — all it gets is a strea
Quincey Morris wrote
No matter what you do, file a bug with the 3rd-party framework. Their macros
should not leak.
The thing that bothers me is why macros should be substituting into method
parameter names at all. It potentially brings *pieces* of method names into the
global symbol namespa
H Miersch wrote:
then why does Xcode complain about an unused result? this is just another example of a TOTALLY USELESS error message.
anyway, i fixed it, and now it works. thanks.
ok, it looks like i've sorted the original problem. but here's the next one:
i have this line:
for (i = 0; i
On Oct 28, 2012, at 12:01 PM, Jens Alfke wrote:
>
> On Oct 28, 2012, at 1:37 AM, Kyle Sluder wrote:
>
>>> In general, initialization code like this in a nib-loaded object should go
>>> into its -awakeFromNib method, which is [almost] guaranteed to be the first
>>> method invoked on that obje
Hi all,
I have a menu item that should be available in my app no matter what. Currently
its target is the app delegate and it does not go through First Responder.
However, it is greyed out when a modal dialog is running which is annoying. Is
there a way to ensure that such a menu can still be r
On Oct 28, 2012, at 3:40 PM, Graham Cox wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I have a menu item that should be available in my app no matter what.
> Currently its target is the app delegate and it does not go through First
> Responder. However, it is greyed out when a modal dialog is running which is
> annoy
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