On Apr 17, 2015, at 9:08 AM, Dave wrote:

> Hi Alex,
> 
> 
>> On 17 Apr 2015, at 00:43, Alex Zavatone <[email protected]> wrote:
>> 
>> Try this.
>> 
>> Apple wants you to use tabs in Xcode (I know, I hate them too).
> 
> Why? What possible concern is of theirs how we choose to view data? Tabs are 
> useful for some things in some apps, but in XCode they suck.
> 

That's not the issue.  The issue is trying to fix the thing you don't like.

>> Create a new tab and double click on where the name of the window would be 
>> and call it Console.
> 
>> In your Preferences, where you have Behaviours, click on the Debugging 
>> Starts item and check Display Window and select Console.
>> 
>> Now, when you run your app and you hit a breakpoint, the Console tab will 
>> display.  Turn off the animated view that you hate in that window.
>> 
>> I'm expecting that it will never show again as long as that tab is displayed 
>> when you hit a breakpoint or condition where the debugger comes up.
>> 
>> Let me know how it works.
> 
> Will do, it’s a bit worrying that the stats window is interacting with the 
> Target App or vice versa and causing crashes. I’m guessing you don’t see this 
> if you are targeting iOS since you’ve either running your code under the 
> simulator or on the device itself. 

I haven't seen the stats readout causing any crashes, but I'm running on Mac OS 
10.10.2 in Xcode 6.2 on with 10 windows open (command ` is really easy to 
press) and one window is called console which I use for the debugger.

If I turn it off in a window, it stays off in that window.  Just tested this 
several times.

Hope this solves your issue.

Cheers,
Alex Zavatone
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