Re: Running an NSApplication from a test case

2014-03-05 Thread jonat...@mugginsoft.com
On 4 Mar 2014, at 21:27, Daniel Luis dos Santos daniel.d...@gmail.com wrote: Hello all, I have a test case where I would like to launch a UI. I have a NIB with a window that I load through code in the test case. Here goes the code : - (void)testExample { NSArray* topLevelWidgets =

secure uitextfield is not secure

2014-03-05 Thread Luther Baker
I'm generally a big fan of Cocoa Touch - but why does the secure option on a UITextField still display the character you are typing? And, is there any way I can turn this off? Its generally hard to get non-employee AD credentials created or to stand up DEV Active Directory services ... so

Re: secure uitextfield is not secure

2014-03-05 Thread Quincey Morris
On Mar 5, 2014, at 11:17 , Luther Baker lutherba...@gmail.com wrote: I'm generally a big fan of Cocoa Touch - but why does the secure option on a UITextField still display the character you are typing? Because (in my own case) I’m incapable of typing a password correctly using the on-screen

Re: secure uitextfield is not secure

2014-03-05 Thread Eric E. Dolecki
Maybe using a custom font containing nothing but bullets for the secure UITextField? I don't know if that would work or not. - Eric Google Voice: (508) 656-0622 Twitter: eric_dolecki XBoxLive: edolecki PSN: eric_dolecki On Wed, Mar 5, 2014 at 2:43 PM, Quincey Morris

Re: secure uitextfield is not secure

2014-03-05 Thread Fritz Anderson
On 5 Mar 2014, at 1:17 PM, Luther Baker lutherba...@gmail.com wrote: I'm generally a big fan of Cocoa Touch - but why does the secure option on a UITextField still display the character you are typing? Touch keyboards offer almost no user feedback compared to physical ones. The keys on the

Re: secure uitextfield is not secure

2014-03-05 Thread Luther Baker
Yep - cool. I'm not too dismayed and take it as it comes but I'm just seriously surprised. It seems like a very obvious use case. Google Mail does email differently and I think they justify it by _selling_ you a different way to look at your email. I have a hard to rationalizing this in a similar

Re: secure uitextfield is not secure

2014-03-05 Thread Alex Kac
On Mar 5, 2014, at 3:05 PM, Luther Baker lutherba...@gmail.com wrote: The only way to find out is to file a radar and see what comes out in iOS 8. How very sad ... there should really be no way I could influence Apple in this regard. IE: this isn't some elaborate, hard to define bug. This

Re: secure uitextfield is not secure

2014-03-05 Thread Quincey Morris
On Mar 5, 2014, at 14:05 , Luther Baker lutherba...@gmail.com wrote: But I don't think this really justifies the decision. My daughter dropped the iPad on her toe but I don't think that warrants rubber bumpers on the device :) Just to emphasize: I wasn’t making a witticism. It’s a genuine

Re: secure uitextfield is not secure

2014-03-05 Thread Kyle Sluder
On Wed, Mar 5, 2014, at 02:57 PM, Quincey Morris wrote: I agree with the earlier post which said (more or less) that if it’s your job to demo stuff, then it’s also your (your company’s) responsibility to provide a non-secure demo platform, or a non-secure account. Take Luther's app out of the

Re: secure uitextfield is not secure

2014-03-05 Thread Luther Baker
Hey -- this is all good stuff! I'm definitely a bit less cynical about this topic now. Thanks for the virtual turn-around! On Wed, Mar 5, 2014 at 5:41 PM, Kyle Sluder k...@ksluder.com wrote: On Wed, Mar 5, 2014, at 02:57 PM, Quincey Morris wrote: I agree with the earlier post which said