I was completely wrong here. The problem is at a totally different
place. Look at the code in NSTextFieldsCell that Nicola changed a few
months ago:
- (void) drawInteriorWithFrame: (NSRect)cellFrame inView:
(NSView*)controlView
{
/* Do nothing if there is already a text editor doing the drawing;
* otherwise, we draw everything twice. That is bad if there are
* any transparency involved (eg, even an anti-alias font!) because
* if the semi-transparent pixels are drawn over themselves they
* become less transparent (eg, an anti-alias font becomes darker
* and gives the impression of being bold).
*/
if (([controlView respondsToSelector: @selector(currentEditor)] == NO)
|| ([(NSTextField *)controlView currentEditor] == nil))
{
if (_textfieldcell_draws_background)
{
if ([self isEnabled])
{
[_background_color set];
}
else
{
[[NSColor controlBackgroundColor] set];
}
NSRectFill([self drawingRectForBounds: cellFrame]);
}
[super drawInteriorWithFrame: cellFrame inView: controlView];
}
}
This basically means that a text field cell will only draw itself, when
there is no editor for the containing control view. This is nice and
fine, when the text field cell is the only cell of a text field, but in
the matrix and table view case this stops all the cells in the
controller from drawing themselves while there is an editor.
How to get of this trap? We could check if the cell is the selected cell
of its control view and only then not draw it in the editing case. This
may work as a table view has no clear notion of a selected cell and so
all cells will still get drawn, whereas matrix and normal control handle
this correctly.
Another possibility is to move the "don't draw" check into the control
view. This looks better to me. A cell should always draw itself when
asked to do so, the decision should be put somewhere else.
Any better ideas out there?
Fred
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