fline users. I will never use the shared directory of a
>>> user, the best way would be in / Application Support in .localDomainMask,
>>> but I don't know why some applications can and others cannot (the mine is
>>> signed and notarized).
>>>
>>>
>&
r use the shared directory of a
> user, the best way would be in / Application Support in .localDomainMask, but
> I don't know why some applications can and others cannot (the mine is signed
> and notarized).
>
>
> Regards
>
> El 19/4/21 a las 1:51, Uli Kusterer escribió
Uli,
Yes, you’re right. My bad.
If two users (for instance, through remote access or Fast User Switching) open
and edit the same file, bad things will happen.
Regards,
Flavio
> Am 18.04.2021 um 21:51 schrieb Uli Kusterer :
>
> That is actually wrong. It is dangerous to create
Davidap,
You must first understand what kind of data you have and how that data would be
shared with users.
The “Application Support” folders — both in /Library and in ~/Library (“~”
means “current user”) — are meant for files that are needed by the application
but shouldn’t be stored in the
If...
... the new platform-specific APIs are just that: platform-specific;
... there’s a way to integrate Swift code in Objective-C apps (and, I presume,
Objective-C++ too);
... the most common complaint is about keeping code cross-platform;
Then what is the problem with new,