Thanks, that works :-)

On 2009-10-03, at 12:14 PM, Alexander Heinz wrote:

You could just use (NSNormalWindowLevel - 1). That should be clear to anyone reading the code that you want the level below the lowest.

- Alex

On Oct 3, 2009, at 2:04 PM, PCWiz wrote:

The lowest constant I could find was 0 (NSNormalWindowLevel) and it still positioned itself above other windows. Is there a constant for -1 ?

On 2009-10-03, at 11:44 AM, Sherm Pendley wrote:

On Sat, Oct 3, 2009 at 1:32 PM, PCWiz <[email protected]> wrote:

On 2009-10-03, at 10:44 AM, Ron Fleckner wrote:


[myWindow setLevel:<anNSWindowLevelConstant>];

check the docs.

Thanks, setting the window level to -1 worked :)

Don't do that. Magic numbers are considered very poor programming:

<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magic_number_%28programming%29#Unnamed_numerical_constants >

As Ron suggested - use one of the window level constants that are
described in the docs. That's why they're there!

sherm--

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