On 05.11.2012, at 01:12, Todd Heberlein wrote:
> Is there currently a standard, Apple-recommended way of doing interoperable
> client-server architectures?
That's not something Apple should recommend. However, new Apple technologies
use a RESTful web service with JSON (e.g. Passcode).
>
> I
On Sun, Nov 4, 2012 at 12:25 AM, Rick Mann wrote:
> Ah, interesting! Still doesn't go quite as far as I want Apple to go: I want
> a power-cycled device to skip Springboard and launch my app. I want the
> watchdog to kill and restart my app.
>
Check out the Lock to App feature available with iO
Continuing. In here…
http://opensource.apple.com/source/libdispatch/libdispatch-228.18/os/object.h
I find a maze of #define compiler directives which affect
OS_OBJECT_USE_OBJC_RETAIN_RELEASE, and also there is a comment which implies
that maybe I should add compiler flag -DOS_OBJECT_USE_OBJC=0
I have an NSTableView in a drawer. I'm using Core Data and I'm trying
to have the drawer opening and showing the table rows sorted by the
first column.. but have been unsuccessful.
I can sort the table by clicking on column headers, but when the
drawer is opened the data is unsorted.
Obviously I
First of all, thanks, "in advance", *literally*, to Greg Parker for answering
my question, and my apologies for the additional post.
I say *literally* because although I still don't have his reply in my email, I
see it on cocoabuilder.com.
Lately I've been seeing other people respond to message
On Nov 3, 2012, at 12:55 , Jerry Krinock wrote:
> I want to absorb it into a big old project that contains a couple dozen
> targets. So I added a target for it, with ARC. But building the big project
> fails because the macro OS_OBJECT_USE_OBJC_RETAIN_RELEASE is defined, and in
> xpc.h this
Le 5 nov. 2012 à 18:56, Jerry Krinock a écrit :
> Continuing. In here…
>
> http://opensource.apple.com/source/libdispatch/libdispatch-228.18/os/object.h
>
> I find a maze of #define compiler directives which affect
> OS_OBJECT_USE_OBJC_RETAIN_RELEASE, and also there is a comment which implie
On Nov 5, 2012, at 10:03 , Paul Johnson wrote:
> I've selected the Table View and clicked on tab to select the Bindings
> inspector. Under the Table Content heading I found Sort Descriptors,
> and it is there that I'm focusing. (For example, I've checked the
> "Bind to" box and selected the Array
On Mon, Nov 5, 2012 at 1:16 PM, Jerry Krinock wrote:
> Lately I've been seeing other people respond to messages on these boards,
> apparently out of order. I have seen messages appear on
> cocaobuilder.com*hours* before they appear in my email. I may also have seen
> it happen
> vice versa on
Hi,
I am assigned this small utility which should clear inactive RAM.
I know Mac OS X manages memory quite efficiently and inactive RAM also has a
purpose.
But I have to make this.
Prior to Mountain Lion I was allocating memory in my app that was roughly
equivalent to free + inactive RAM.
And i
I am a rank beginner in Xcode and Objective-C, very slowly getting to
grips with things using Xcode 4.5.1 in 10.8. My only significant
experience is with AppleScript and Perl and, so far as AppleScript is
concerned, it looks to me as though I’d be wiser to set it aside and
work in straight C
On Nov 5, 2012, at 10:16 AM, Jerry Krinock wrote:
> First of all, thanks, "in advance", *literally*, to Greg Parker for answering
> my question, and my apologies for the additional post.
>
> I say *literally* because although I still don't have his reply in my email,
> I see it on cocoabuilder.
Hi Eve,
> Use overlays. Look into ClassicMap:
> https://github.com/kishikawakatsumi/ClassicMap which is doing about the same
> thing using likely illegally obtained Google tiles.
I’ll have a look. It is actually displaying maps *over* a cartographic
background (and not some cartographic layer
On Mon, 5 Nov 2012 10:16:13 -0800, Jerry Krinock said:
>Lately I've been seeing other people respond to messages on these
>boards, apparently out of order.
Likewise, on and off for months now.
>P.S. If Apple would shut down this board so everyone would use the new
>dev forums instead, that woul
> There is (or was) a QuartzDebug option to show which parts of a window are
> actually transparent; on the standard windows only the corners are
> transparent, so for most of the window area the system can use the faster
> opaque calculations. I never filed a bug requesting a way for non-Apple
On Nov 5, 2012, at 10:54 AM, Nick Rogers wrote:
> I am assigned this small utility which should clear inactive RAM.
> I know Mac OS X manages memory quite efficiently and inactive RAM also has a
> purpose.
> But I have to make this.
What on earth does “clear inactive RAM” mean? No offense, but
On 5 Nov 2012, at 10:54 AM, Nick Rogers wrote:
> I am assigned this small utility which should clear inactive RAM.
> I know Mac OS X manages memory quite efficiently and inactive RAM also has a
> purpose.
> But I have to make this.
What are you trying to achieve? What exactly do you mean by "in
When you have alpha transparency you can either blend the aerial tiles into the
map view or blend the entire map view into the aerial tiles. Either way, I
think, you can get something that looks good. Semitransparent overlays
consisted of aerial tiles might actually work, and it is in the same
The problem with the Apple Forums is that you get people who are on a power
trip there more often than you have here. The really nice part of the Apple
Forums is sometimes you actually get engineers who answer questions there.
I also sense that this list is far more technically minded whereas t
> There is (or was) a QuartzDebug option to show which parts of a window are
> actually transparent; on the standard windows only the corners are
> transparent, so for most of the window area the system can use the faster
> opaque calculations. I never filed a bug requesting a way for non-Apple
Eve,
> When you have alpha transparency you can either blend the aerial tiles into
> the map view or blend the entire map view into the aerial tiles. Either way,
> I think, you can get something that looks good. Semitransparent overlays
> consisted of aerial tiles might actually work, and it
On 4 Nov 2012, at 1:03 AM, John Delacour wrote:
> Perl is another matter altogether. While I am getting up to speed with Obj-C
> I would like to be able to include Perl routines within projects, and I can
> find very little on the WWW to be guided by. So far I have experimented
> simply with
On 4 Nov 2012, at 3:03 AM, John Delacour wrote:
> I am a rank beginner in Xcode and Objective-C, very slowly getting to grips
> with things using Xcode 4.5.1 in 10.8. My only significant experience is
> with AppleScript and Perl and, so far as AppleScript is concerned, it looks
> to me as tho
Same here. Been on this list for a very long time and hope it will continue.
Just don't have the time to regularly hop in the browser, go through multiple
logins to finally get to *one* of the forum and check what is new.
-Laurent.
--
Laurent Daudelin
AIM/iChat/Skype:LaurentDaudelin
Not sure what RAM "clearing" means but if you want to purge the disk cache,
check out man purge in the terminal.
On Nov 5, 2012, at 1:54 PM, Nick Rogers wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I am assigned this small utility which should clear inactive RAM.
> I know Mac OS X manages memory quite efficiently and inac
Also: I recently went on a marathon watching Troll 2, Birdemic, Manos: The
Hands of Fate, and Plan 9 from Outer Space. It reminded me of the search
facility in the Apple Developer Forums. Jaw-dropping. Comically unqualified to
be what it claims it is. The search context is discarded when you ref
On Nov 5, 2012, at 12:55 PM, Laurent Daudelin wrote:
> Same here. Been on this list for a very long time and hope it will continue.
> Just don't have the time to regularly hop in the browser, go through multiple
> logins to finally get to *one* of the forum and check what is new.
The devforums
>>> There is (or was) a QuartzDebug option to show which parts of a window are
>>> actually transparent; on the standard windows only the corners are
>>> transparent, so for most of the window area the system can use the faster
>>> opaque calculations. I never filed a bug requesting a way for no
On 05/11/2012 20:44, Fritz Anderson wrote:
On 4 Nov 2012, at 3:03 AM, John Delacour wrote:
... While I am getting up to speed with Obj-C I would like to be able to
include Perl routines within projects...
So long as you understand that this isn't usually a productive thing to do. It
may
On Mon, Nov 5, 2012, at 02:20 PM, Andrea3000 wrote:
> Since I still have a Snow Leopard partition I have access to QuartDebug
> 4.1 and the hidden setting you suggested works as expected.
> The strange thing is that while regular windows like Safari, Mail, ecc,
> are all opaque except for the corne
On 5 Nov 2012, at 2:59 PM, John Delacour wrote:
> [] hearing all the whoops and applause as the most elementary new things
> were unveiled and it was announced that a dictionary object could now finally
> be built in something approaching the sane way it would be done in ancient
> languages
On Nov 5, 2012, at 2:59 PM, John Delacour wrote:
> I am interested in your comment that “this isn't usually a productive thing
> to do”, because I very soon have to decide whether to devote all my time to
> getting to grips with ObjC or continue dreaming that I can do most of the
> work in Pe
On Nov 5, 2012, at 12:50 PM, Quincey Morris wrote:
> On Nov 5, 2012, at 10:03 , Paul Johnson wrote:
>
>> I can sort the table by clicking on column headers, but when the
>> drawer is opened the data is unsorted.
>
> Yes, because clicking on column headers causes the table view to *create* the
On Nov 5, 2012, at 5:39 PM, Kyle Sluder wrote:
> On Mon, Nov 5, 2012, at 02:20 PM, Andrea3000 wrote:
>> Since I still have a Snow Leopard partition I have access to QuartDebug
>> 4.1 and the hidden setting you suggested works as expected.
>> The strange thing is that while regular windows like Saf
On Nov 5, 2012, at 9:01 PM, Paul Johnson wrote:
> Thanks, Ken.
You're welcome.
> I WOULD like to know if this code can be removed and instead of this
> code I can make some changes in the Bindings Inspector. It just seems
> to nice to be able to avoid writing code when I can specify things in
>
On 05.11.2012, at 23:20, Greg Parker wrote:
>
> The devforums have an "Email Updates" feature for each sub-forum. If you
> enable that for the topics you're interested in then you can read as if it
> were a mailing list. You'll only need to visit the web site when you want to
> post.
Thanks
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