On Mar 6, 2009, at 12:57 PM, James Cicenia wrote:
[self setImage:[[UIImage imageNamed:@"WF-MyLocBu-
DistBack.png"]autorelease]];
Unrelated, but don't do this. You don't have ownership to the results
of +imageNamed:, so you should not be releasing or autoreleasing it.
--
David Duncan
Apple
On Fri, Mar 6, 2009 at 4:37 PM, James Cicenia wrote:
> I don't see any property for antialiasing on or off.
>
> How do I turn it off to see?
You don't. Aliased text is more commonly known as "the jaggies" and
can be particularly hard to read.
--Kyle Sluder
__
I don't see any property for antialiasing on or off.
How do I turn it off to see?
On Mar 6, 2009, at 3:21 PM, Alex Kac wrote:
Well if the text is anti-aliased (which it is by default in a
UILabel), then the center of the text would be white, but the edges
are gray to help make it smooth. If
Well if the text is anti-aliased (which it is by default in a
UILabel), then the center of the text would be white, but the edges
are gray to help make it smooth. If the font is small enough, it can
look gray and not pure white.
On Mar 6, 2009, at 3:17 PM, James Cicenia wrote:
Hmm,
What d
Hmm,
What do you mean?
Thanks
James
On Mar 6, 2009, at 3:00 PM, Alex Kac wrote:
Could it be anti-aliased?
On Mar 6, 2009, at 2:57 PM, James Cicenia wrote:
Hello -
I have a table view with dynamic subclassed cells :
- (id)initWithFrame:(CGRect)aRect reuseIdentifier:(NSString
*)identifier
Could it be anti-aliased?
On Mar 6, 2009, at 2:57 PM, James Cicenia wrote:
Hello -
I have a table view with dynamic subclassed cells :
- (id)initWithFrame:(CGRect)aRect reuseIdentifier:(NSString
*)identifier
{
if (self = [super initWithFrame:aRect reuseIdentifier:identifier])
Hello -
I have a table view with dynamic subclassed cells :
- (id)initWithFrame:(CGRect)aRect reuseIdentifier:(NSString *)identifier
{
if (self = [super initWithFrame:aRect reuseIdentifier:identifier])
{
self.selectionStyle = UITableViewCellSelectionStyleNone;
[