Friends,
Platform: OSX
Distribution: Outside of App Store
Aim: I want to distinguish “ordinary users” of my app from “commercial users”,
where the latter might be defined as anyone installing my app on 5 or 10 (pick
a number) different macs.
Rationale: I want to offer my app for free to ho
You can leave a small self-contained program running until the current user
session is terminated once your app is started on a machine and expose its
usage through Bonjour. And then when the free version of your app is starting
it scans bonjour for such services, and refuse to launch if the ser
I do something similar in the licensing of my Objective-C accessibility
frameworks (at pfiddlesoft.com/frameworks). You can use my frameworks for free
if you use them in an application that you distribute for free, but you must
pay a one-time licensing fee if you charge for your application. The
> On 24 Jul 2015, at 21:13, Bill Cheeseman wrote:
>
> I find that the most important and effective use of the honor system is with
> "big companies.”
My "commercial users" are more likely to be small independent s/w / IT
consultants, or educational institutions (i.e sysadmins of such).
Exc
I was able to use this code, but only after init
var screens = NSScreen.screens() as! [NSScreen]
for screen in screens {
if screen == window?.screen! {
NSLog("MY SCREEN \(screen)")
}
}
On Wed, Jul 22, 2015 at 5:09 PM, Dave wrot
I wonder why the second line doesn't' compile
var screens = NSScreen.screens() as! [NSScreen]
find(screens, window?.screen!)
On Fri, Jul 24, 2015 at 1:19 PM, Juanjo Conti
wrote:
> I was able to use this code, but only after init
>
> var screens = NSScreen.screens() as!
Thank you
It’s work for my help file (not for Sparkle but it’s less important)
I never search in iOS doc…
Merci
Marc
> Le 24 juil. 2015 à 01:31, Charles Srstka a écrit :
>
> On Jul 23, 2015, at 4:57 PM, Jens Alfke wrote:
>>
>>
>>> On Jul 23, 2015, at 12:41 PM, Marc Danguy wrote:
>>>
>>
In my code, I catch NSErrors and inspect them in the debugger, and see codes
like NSCocoaErrorDomain Code=516. How can I get the symbolic constant for that
error, especially in Swift? The error headers in swift don't show the values,
and it seems the objective-C headers have moved about a bit si
> On Jul 24, 2015, at 5:14 PM, Rick Mann wrote:
>
> In my code, I catch NSErrors and inspect them in the debugger, and see codes
> like NSCocoaErrorDomain Code=516. How can I get the symbolic constant for
> that error, especially in Swift? The error headers in swift don't show the
> values, a
> On Jul 24, 2015, at 17:28 , Jens Alfke wrote:
>
> http://osstatus.com has been my BFF since I discovered it.
I knew that existed, but searching for things like "cocoa error" didn't turn it
up. BOOKMARKING AGAIN.
--
Rick Mann
rm...@latencyzero.com
> On 25 Jul 2015, at 01:13, Juanjo Conti wrote:
>
> I wonder why the second line doesn't' compile
>
>var screens = NSScreen.screens() as! [NSScreen]
>
>find(screens, window?.screen!)
>
> On Fri, Jul 24, 2015 at 1:19 PM, Juanjo Conti
> wrote:
The error message should tell yo
> On Jul 24, 2015, at 7:19 PM, Roland King wrote:
>
> if let screen = window?.screen
> {
> find(…)
> }
> else
> {
> // handle the lack of a screen gracefully
> }
>
> it’s longer, but it’s clearer and it says I’ve considered what semantically
> it means to have a nil screen.
You
On Jul 24, 2015, at 19:19 , Roland King wrote:
>
> let myVar = ( let ifNotOptional = something?.something else ) ?
> ifNotOptional.stringName : “No Name”
>
> but can’t find any syntax to do something like that
Can’t you do something like:
let myVar = something?.somethingElse?.stringNa
On Jul 24, 2015, at 19:43 , Greg Parker wrote:
>
> Downside: you must specify the variable's type.
Incidentally, is there any conceptual reason why the type can’t be inferred in
this case? The syntax doesn’t seem any harder to decode than 'let … = … ? … :
…’ is.
There is a market opportunity for a service that indexes software tips by
software version.
This because when I google for
"Xcode 6" NSInfiniteLoop
... I mostly get hits for the NSInfiniteLoop from XCode 4.
I often think of doing this myself but I have too many ideas, even when
they are good
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