On Nov 1, 2011, at 11:00, James Merkel wrote:

> Why would someone want to base their application on the tenuous availability 
> of a temporary exception ?
> 
> Jim Merkel
> 
> On Nov 1, 2011, at 10:30 AM, Laurent Etiemble wrote:
> 
>> Hello,
>> 
>> In a sandboxed application, you can read/write files without the save dialog 
>> by using the "File Access Temporary Exceptions" 
>> (cf.http://developer.apple.com/library/mac/#documentation/Miscellaneous/Reference/EntitlementKeyReference/AppSandboxTemporaryExceptionEntitlements/AppSandboxTemporaryExceptionEntitlements.html).
>>  These keys describe the folders in which you want to read/write files, 
>> either relative to user home folder or absolute.
>> 
>> Here is an example to read any files inside the /Users folder:
>> 
>>      
>> <key>com.apple.security.temporary-exception.files.absolute-path.read-only</key>
>>      <array>
>>              <string>/Users/</string>
>>      </array>
>> 
>> Here is an example to read and write any files inside the user home:
>> 
>>      
>> <key>com.apple.security.temporary-exception.files.home-relative-path.read-write</key>
>>      <array>
>>              <string>/</string>
>>      </array>

Well, I maintain a synchronization tool. For me, that seems like a reasonable 
solution. Each time the user decides to synchronize 2 folders, I could just use 
a temporary exception.

-Laurent.
-- 
Laurent Daudelin
AIM/iChat/Skype:LaurentDaudelin                                 
http://www.nemesys-soft.com/
Logiciels Nemesys Software                                      
laur...@nemesys-soft.com

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