Hello everyone. My past few related questions weren’t answered, but maybe
someone can shed light on this one.
I am writing a daemon (a system background process that runs always,
privileged, started by launchd).
My code is mostly C++ “unix style” but also relies on few private
Cocoa-Frameworks
Apologies for this 101 question.
Tried out Mac programming a couple of years ago, pre-Swift and when storyboards
were about to come out for the Mac. I used XIBs back then. Forward to a couple
months ago, and I tried out a Mac programming book. I started a new Xcode (7)
default project (no docs,
In a non document based app template there is a window in MainMenu.nib hooked
up and configured to display at launch.
There is a certain amount of seeming magic that happens when an app launches.
It's better exposed in main.m in Objective-C where a function is called that
kicks things off.
Th
This doc covers it.
https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/General/Conceptual/MOSXAppProgrammingGuide/CoreAppDesign/CoreAppDesign.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP40010543-CH3-SW1
Sent from my iPhone
> On Mar 1, 2016, at 6:33 PM, Daryle Walker wrote:
>
> Apologies for this 101 questi
> On 2016 Mar 01, at 01:33, Daryle Walker wrote:
>
> Tried out Mac programming … turned on … storyboards.
If:
• Your primary experience is in OS X>
• You know nibs.
• Your purpose is to ship OS X apps, not broaden your horizons.
Is there any reason to learn and use storyboards?
Thank you for that, Jerry. I started to reply in a similar way this morning,
but deleted my draft because I thought I might just be making unhelpful noise.
I am in Storyboards 101 right along with Daryle, and as I typed in example code
from a tutorial project, my fumbling around with autolayout
On Mar 1, 2016, at 10:40 AM, Charles Jenkins wrote:
> Thank you for that, Jerry. I started to reply in a similar way this morning,
> but deleted my draft because I thought I might just be making unhelpful noise.
>
> I am in Storyboards 101 right along with Daryle, and as I typed in example
> c
On Mar 1, 2016, at 07:20 , Jerry Krinock wrote:
>
> If:
>
> • Your primary experience is in OS X>
> • You know nibs.
> • Your purpose is to ship OS X apps, not broaden your horizons.
>
> Is there any reason to learn and use storyboards?
There is one good (though mystical) reason. As we’ve see
> On Mar 1, 2016, at 12:01 AM, Motti Shneor wrote:
>
> 1. Can launchd launch a code bundle? as a daemon?
Launchd has no notion of bundles; those are a concept defined at higher levels.
Launchd just knows about executable files.
Also, are you sure you want a daemon and not an agent? Daemons ru
> On 2016 Mar 01, at 10:06, Quincey Morris
> wrote:
>
> open TextEdit, open the storyboard, and choose File -> Revert To Saved ->
> Browse All Versions…
Very cool. I never realized that the Versions Browser would work across the
edge case of document types (a text file, in this case) which
> But where does the default one come from?
Here are some steps for an iOS project - maybe it will be in the same area.
Select and open the storyboard in the IDE. Find the View Controller scene
you think is showing up by default. Open the scene (click the arrow) and
select the actual view control
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