> On Jul 14, 2015, at 12:29 , Fritz Anderson <fri...@manoverboard.org> wrote: > > Blank? Not a placeholder for “Current — Your_Target_Name?” The NIB/storyboard > loading process for Swift needs an absolute module name, and in my > experience, IB’s reference may not survive transfer between projects or > targets. The result would be a blank Module field (-> "", not a default). I > wish I remembered the solution — I last dealt with it in an Xcode 6 beta.
No, it had the default, whatever that is. I meant I hadn't entered anything in there. > In the Identity inspector, try manually entering the target’s module name, or > deleting the class name and typing it back in in hopes IB will find the class > and complete the name and module for you. I may even have rebuilt the scene > or storyboard from scratch, but I think that was just thrashing on my part. What is my module's name, exactly, in an app target? I really wish the language let me specify the module name in each source file, rather than using the target/framework name. -- Rick Mann rm...@latencyzero.com _______________________________________________ Cocoa-dev mailing list (Cocoa-dev@lists.apple.com) Please do not post admin requests or moderator comments to the list. Contact the moderators at cocoa-dev-admins(at)lists.apple.com Help/Unsubscribe/Update your Subscription: https://lists.apple.com/mailman/options/cocoa-dev/archive%40mail-archive.com This email sent to arch...@mail-archive.com