I've done those things already in my experimentation. Trouble is, my window is
for a different window controller - not Application Delegate - and the window
loads when the class does. Show Window On Launch doesn't seem to make any
difference.
On 16 Jun 2013, at 09:33, Michael Starke
wrote:
Forget what I said.
If the value takes effect, window isn't nil.
The trick is to uncheck "show window on launch". If I chekc that box, my window
is visible at first too.
- Michael
On 16.06.2013, at 10:33, Michael Starke
wrote:
> I'm using the same effect in my application.
>
> The problem i
I'm using the same effect in my application.
The problem is, if you use this method, the window might not be there yet. Did
you inspect if the window iVar is actually not nil?
The way I did it is using the windowDidLoad method and call
-(void)windowDidLoad {
[super windowDidLoad]
I am trying to set NSWindow (borderless, with no controls) to be transparent
before I display it (so that I can fade it onto the screen). Unfortunately, I
don't seem to be able to - it loads, visibly, then sets the opacity to 0
(resulting in the window flickering at full opacity, before disappe