Others seem to have found
http://www.thotzy.com/THOTZY/Distributed_Objects_Demo.html
-- to be useful.
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Hi Albert,
You might try appending the text directly to the text storage:
NSMutableAttributedString *attstr =
[[[NSMutableAttributedString alloc] initWithString:someText] autorelease];
[[textView textStorage] beginEditing];
[[textView
On Sep 22, 2010, at 4:03 AM, albert jordan wrote:
I have setup an NSTextView in an NSScrollView item in interface builder,
and my window controller objects has an IBOutlet that is linked to TextView
of the item (if I connect it to the NSScrollView, I don't get any text).
Anytime
Hi,
I have a NSMutableArray and need to add a number of elements to it,
and their quantity I know in advance (in fact, they come from another
array).
I think that if I add them one-by-one in a loop, the array will have
to reallocate its internal memory frequently. This seems inefficient.
I'd
Le 22 sept. 2010 à 14:46, Oleg Krupnov a écrit :
Hi,
I have a NSMutableArray and need to add a number of elements to it,
and their quantity I know in advance (in fact, they come from another
array).
I think that if I add them one-by-one in a loop, the array will have
to reallocate its
On Sep 19, 2010, at 9:52 PM, Jim Thomason wrote:
So basically, I get a language built-in version of a macro, and an
option to use a new syntax that I'm not interested in anyway.
Is there something else I'm not seeing or some other utility to them
that I don't yet understand?
One point
On Sep 22, 2010, at 2:46 PM, Oleg Krupnov wrote:
I think that if I add them one-by-one in a loop, the array will have
to reallocate its internal memory frequently. This seems inefficient.
I think and seems are bad advice. What do Shark/Instruments say? Does it
take long? Does this code run so
On Sep 21, 2010, at 8:30 PM, Rafael Cerioli wrote:
Ok, thank you for your answer.
So, you are telling me that [self performSelector:@selector(waitUntilReady)
withObject:nil afterDelay:1] is an input source ? What exactly is the input
source, my selector or the timer that when fired, will
On Tue, 21 Sep 2010 23:52:21 -0400, Scott Anguish sc...@cocoadoc.com said:
can you please file a bug on this?
custom animations are missing at the moment (sadly) but adding that and the
@dynamic would be a very useful bug.
But, not to beat a dead horse or anything, the Core Animation-related
I have a view that contains a UITableView. I am loading an XML file and
parsing it, getting a list of names. I populate a NSMutableArray with those.
I want to stuff them into the tableview, however the table's delegate
methods fire before the XML is done, so if I do a [array count] it will be 0
[tableView reloadData];
Luke
Sent from my iPhone.
On Sep 22, 2010, at 8:20 AM, Eric E. Dolecki edole...@gmail.com wrote:
I have a view that contains a UITableView. I am loading an XML file and
parsing it, getting a list of names. I populate a NSMutableArray with those.
I want to stuff them
I have an NSTableView in an NSSplitView.
I call -reloadData and -setNeedsDisplay:YES
The table does not redisplay with the new data until the split view is
resized. From that point forward it behaves properly with subsequent -
reloadData and -setNeedsDisplay:YES calls.
Is there something
Hi Martin,
THanks so much for the suggestion.
The approach improves the situation, but unfortunately does not resolve it.
But understand now that this is the issue, I'm going to see if there will be
another work around.
Thanks again.
Albert
On Sep 22, 2010, at 3:38 AM, Martin Hewitson
On Sep 22, 2010, at 05:46, Oleg Krupnov wrote:
I have a NSMutableArray and need to add a number of elements to it,
and their quantity I know in advance (in fact, they come from another
array).
I think that if I add them one-by-one in a loop, the array will have
to reallocate its internal
On Wed, Sep 22, 2010 at 10:43 AM, albert jordan albertjor...@me.com wrote:
Hi Martin,
THanks so much for the suggestion.
The approach improves the situation, but unfortunately does not resolve it.
But understand now that this is the issue, I'm going to see if there will be
another work
On Sep 22, 2010, at 10:28, k...@highrolls.net wrote:
I have an NSTableView in an NSSplitView.
I call -reloadData and -setNeedsDisplay:YES
The table does not redisplay with the new data until the split view is
resized. From that point forward it behaves properly with subsequent
Thanks all :)
Google Voice: (508) 656-0622
Twitter: eric_dolecki XBoxLive: edolecki PSN: eric_dolecki
http://blog.ericd.net
On Wed, Sep 22, 2010 at 12:48 PM, Luke Hiesterman luket...@apple.comwrote:
[tableView reloadData];
Luke
Sent from my iPhone.
On Sep 22, 2010, at
On Sep 22, 2010, at 11:17:25, Julien Poissonnier wrote:
On Sep 22, 2010, at 12:52 AM, Rick Mann wrote:
Does iOS (and Mac OS X) clean up thread-local storage upon the completion of
an NSOperation? It seems dangerous to rely on every operation to clean up
its own mess. It also seems that
I've been asked to take the iTunes XML file from a few people and provide a
picker to choose which one to use. That's the easy part. So I have a few of
the XML files and slapped them on a server, etc. however each one averages
about 5MB in size. I am not linking to actual media obviously, but I'd
On Wed, Sep 22, 2010 at 11:31 AM, Rick Mann rm...@latencyzero.com wrote:
Pity. We have a singleton object that creates a subclass of NSOperation,
which then calls back a method on the singleton that's intended to be run on
a separate thread (provided indirectly by the NSOperation). That
On Sep 22, 2010, at 2:38 PM, Eric E. Dolecki wrote:
I've been asked to take the iTunes XML file from a few people and provide a
picker to choose which one to use. That's the easy part. So I have a few of
the XML files and slapped them on a server, etc. however each one averages
about 5MB in
Thanks. This is for internal use, so it's going to be Wifi. This is for
testing only really (a UI). Good to know 5MB XML isn't too big for
iPhone/Touch.
Google Voice: (508) 656-0622
Twitter: eric_dolecki XBoxLive: edolecki PSN: eric_dolecki
http://blog.ericd.net
On Wed, Sep
I knew that wasn't clear. We have a method on the singleton that returns an
MOC. If the thread is the main thread, it returns the main MOC. If not, it
creates a new MOC, and returns that. Then we subsequently pass that MOC around
to the various methods responsible for doing the work of creating
Besides bindings and KVO issues, anything else to look at? I am not
using bindings nor is this KVO.
-koko
On Sep 22, 2010, at 12:12 PM, Quincey Morris wrote:
On Sep 22, 2010, at 10:28, k...@highrolls.net wrote:
I have an NSTableView in an NSSplitView.
I call -reloadData and
On Sep 22, 2010, at 1:01 PM, k...@highrolls.net wrote:
Besides bindings and KVO issues, anything else to look at? I am not using
bindings nor is this KVO.
Have you verified that the NSTableView instance you are calling is non-nil
*and* the expected object?
On Sep 22, 2010, at 12:12 PM,
On Sep 22, 2010, at 12:01 PM, k...@highrolls.net wrote:
Besides bindings and KVO issues, anything else to look at? I am not using
bindings nor is this KVO.
On occasion I've seen a things like this happen if a data source method has
raised an exception. It's generally not safe to throw an
On Sep 22, 2010, at 05:46, Oleg Krupnov wrote:
It seems that the -addObjectsFromArray: method may be what I
need, but the docs do not make it clear if it's internally optimized
to do only a single memory re-allocation.
I'll add my two cents: you should almost always use the method that
On Wed, 22 Sep 2010 15:16:19 +0200, Uli Kusterer
witness.of.teacht...@gmx.net said:
One point nobody mentioned so far: You can use different names for your public
property (e.g. an IBOutlet) and your internal storage (i.e. the instance
variable). I like to avoid name collisions between local
On Sep 21, 2010, at 4:13 PM, Quincey Morris wrote:
On Sep 21, 2010, at 15:37, Sean McBride wrote:
If I have a plain C struct that contains some Obj-C object pointers like:
struct {
int boring;
NSString* string;
} MyStruct
What must I do to be safe in GC?
a) I know I must allocate
Yes, it is the same instance and it is not nil.
On Sep 22, 2010, at 1:23 PM, Keary Suska wrote:
Have you verified that the NSTableView instance you are calling is
non-nil *and* the expected object?
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There are no exceptions noted in any log.
On Sep 22, 2010, at 1:28 PM, Wim Lewis wrote:
On Sep 22, 2010, at 12:01 PM, k...@highrolls.net wrote:
Besides bindings and KVO issues, anything else to look at? I am not
using bindings nor is this KVO.
On occasion I've seen a things like this
Thanks Kyle for the suggestion,
I still get the app to hang. if I bypass writing to the text view things work
fine, so I'm certain it's this operation that hangs the application.Based
on everyone's feedback, below is what I've come up with so far. adbLog is
the culprit TextView.The
Is it possible that the views contained in the split view perhaps not
being wholly nested or having some overlap issue can cause this problem?
I don't want to take it apart and reassemble unless there is some
possibility of success.
-koko
On Sep 22, 2010, at 2:54 PM, k...@highrolls.net
Hi,
Is this an over-release?
timer = [ [NSTimer scheduledTimerWithTimeInterval: ...] retain];
...
[timer invalidate];
[timer release];
I've seen this pattern so many times I figured it was correct,
although it doesn't seem to comply with the memory management rules
(i. e. the timer is first
I did something similar to this a couple of weeks ago - posted about it but
under a heading about NSManagedObjectWillSave notifications.
If you have a singleton with a method which returns an MOC, you can store the
MOCs you create in a CFDictionary in the singleton with the NSThread as key.
Seems reasonable. The only problem I foresee is that if the system is
recycling threads for subsequent NSOperations, I don't think you'll get the
NSThreadWillExitNotification, because the thread itself never exits.
Do you care? In my case I only care that the MOC is appropriate for the
On Sep 22, 2010, at 17:00:13, Roland King wrote:
Seems reasonable. The only problem I foresee is that if the system is
recycling threads for subsequent NSOperations, I don't think you'll get the
NSThreadWillExitNotification, because the thread itself never exits.
Do you care? In my
On Sep 22, 2010, at 16:45:51, Roland King wrote:
I did something similar to this a couple of weeks ago - posted about it but
under a heading about NSManagedObjectWillSave notifications.
If you have a singleton with a method which returns an MOC, you can store the
MOCs you create in a
- (void)invalidate
Discussion
This is the only way to remove a timer from an NSRunLoop object. The
NSRunLoop object removes and releases the timer, either just before
the invalidate method returns or at some later point.
On Sep 22, 2010, at 5:38 PM, slasktrattena...@gmail.com wrote:
On or about 9/22/10 5:06 PM, thus spake Ken Ferry kenfe...@gmail.com:
but previously you could only make an IBOutlet called cancelButton by having
an ivar called cancelButton.
That's just not so. Let's not mix apples and oranges.
* An outlet is a thing in the nib.
* IBOutlet is not an
Is this an over-release?
timer = [ [NSTimer scheduledTimerWithTimeInterval: ...] retain];
...
[timer invalidate];
[timer release];
No, you're not over-releasing the timer.
I've seen this pattern so many times I figured it was correct,
although it doesn't seem to comply with the memory
It might be informative to see the entire backtrace and/or the entire source
for the class, but in any case, I believe that the issue is target:self.
According to the NSTimer documentation, The target object is retained by the
timer and released when the timer is invalidated.
Your object
NanoStore 1.0
© Webbo, L.L.C., 2010. All rights reserved.
September 21, 2010
Today, Webbo is pleased to announce the release of NanoStore:
http://sourceforge.net/projects/nanostore/
NanoStore is a Cocoa wrapper for SQLite, a C library that implements an
embeddable SQL database engine.
With
On Sep 22, 2010, at 7:50 PM, Jeff Johnson wrote:
The NSTimer API is somewhat unfortunate. It would probably be better to have
a delegate API where the delegate is not retained. However, that ship has
sailed. What you need to do is avoid the retain cycle. What I sometimes do is
to create a
On 23 Sep 2010, at 03:51, Tito Ciuro wrote:
Today, Webbo is pleased to announce the release of NanoStore:
http://sourceforge.net/projects/nanostore/
NanoStore is a Cocoa wrapper for SQLite, a C library that implements an
embeddable SQL database engine.
With NanoStore, you store data
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