On Apr 25, 2008, at 5:51 PM, Jean-Daniel Dupas wrote:
Le 26 avr. 08 à 01:44, Steve Christensen a écrit :
On Apr 25, 2008, at 12:45 PM, Erik Verbruggen wrote:
On 25 Apr 2008, at 20:06, Steve Christensen wrote:
I put both the window and NSWindowController subclass in
MainMenu.nib since some
Le 26 avr. 08 à 01:44, Steve Christensen a écrit :
On Apr 25, 2008, at 12:45 PM, Erik Verbruggen wrote:
On 25 Apr 2008, at 20:06, Steve Christensen wrote:
I put both the window and NSWindowController subclass in
MainMenu.nib since some of the menu items control behavior in the
window (an
On Apr 25, 2008, at 12:45 PM, Erik Verbruggen wrote:
On 25 Apr 2008, at 20:06, Steve Christensen wrote:
I put both the window and NSWindowController subclass in
MainMenu.nib since some of the menu items control behavior in the
window (and some of the window's current state is reflected in t
Le 25 avr. 08 à 21:06, Steve Christensen a écrit :
On Apr 24, 2008, at 5:01 PM, Ken Thomases wrote:
On Apr 24, 2008, at 6:39 PM, Steve Christensen wrote:
I'm rewriting an old legacy app in Cocoa and have run into a
stumbling block. The app is supposed to support having multiple
windows op
On Apr 24, 2008, at 5:01 PM, Ken Thomases wrote:
On Apr 24, 2008, at 6:39 PM, Steve Christensen wrote:
I'm rewriting an old legacy app in Cocoa and have run into a
stumbling block. The app is supposed to support having multiple
windows open, but the window content is unrelated to the concept
On Apr 24, 2008, at 6:39 PM, Steve Christensen wrote:
I'm rewriting an old legacy app in Cocoa and have run into a
stumbling block. The app is supposed to support having multiple
windows open, but the window content is unrelated to the concept of
a document - which is the "normal" multiple w