Any suggestion how to jump from one method parameter prototype to the next
to replace them one after the other? Eclipse does that with tab.
If I understand you correctly, control-/
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Please do not
Am 19.10.2009 um 08:05 schrieb Dave Keck:
Any suggestion how to jump from one method parameter prototype to
the next
to replace them one after the other? Eclipse does that with tab.
If I understand you correctly, control-/
Yep, that’s it!
I didn’t see it in the prefs. Got it now.
Thank
On 18.10.2009, at 04:35, Ken Thomases wrote:
On Oct 17, 2009, at 2:24 AM, Uli Kusterer wrote:
What do project templates have to do with code completion? The
comments don't mention how to customize code completion stubs
either. Did I overlook something?
For controlling code completion,
Am 18.10.2009 um 04:35 schrieb Ken Thomases:
For controlling code completion, search for
XCCodeSenseFormattingOptions on this page: http://developer.apple.com/mac/library/documentation/DeveloperTools/Reference/XcodeUserDefaultRef/100-Xcode_User_Defaults/UserDefaultRef.html
Thank you Ken,
On 16.10.2009, at 11:43, Graham Cox wrote:
On 16/10/2009, at 7:12 PM, Uli Kusterer wrote:
But you don't have to let Xcode frustrate you like this - you can
define your own templates for all of the stubs it inserts.
How? Where?!!! :-D
On 17/10/2009, at 6:24 PM, Uli Kusterer wrote:
What do project templates have to do with code completion? The
comments don't mention how to customize code completion stubs
either. Did I overlook something?
I didn't say anything about code completion. I understood the OP to be
talking
On 17/10/2009, at 10:25 PM, Graham Cox wrote:
If there is a way to disable these insertions independently and I've missed
it, please someone, let me know how to do it.
I can't recommend the ODCompletionDictionary plug-in for Xcode highly enough:
On Oct 17, 2009, at 2:24 AM, Uli Kusterer wrote:
What do project templates have to do with code completion? The
comments don't mention how to customize code completion stubs
either. Did I overlook something?
For controlling code completion, search for
XCCodeSenseFormattingOptions on this
Thanks a million for this, awesome!
--
yandy
On Oct 17, 2009, at 10:01 PM, Rob Keniger wrote:
On 17/10/2009, at 10:25 PM, Graham Cox wrote:
If there is a way to disable these insertions independently and
I've missed it, please someone, let me know how to do it.
I can't recommend
I used the semi-colon until Ali at Apple said that we don’t do it that way.
So I no longer do it that way.
Personal preference only.
On Oct 15, 2009, at 8:54 PM, Frederick C. Lee wrote:
1) I've seen an alternative way of defining a method, with the semicolon
after the declaration, before
On Fri, Oct 16, 2009 at 12:01 AM, Scott Anguish sc...@cocoadoc.com wrote:
I used the semi-colon until Ali at Apple said that we don’t do it that way.
Heh, I didn't use the semi-colon until Tim at Omni said we do it that way. :-P
The triple-clickiness is a very nice convenience (especially when
Hello,
If it's a feature, then it's definitely a new one since the original
specification of Objective-C. It turned out to be surprisingly hard
to find that specification, but I found a grammar description here:
On Oct 16, 2009, at 12:17 AM, Sander Stoks wrote:
If it's a feature, then it's definitely a new one since the original
specification of Objective-C. It turned out to be surprisingly hard
to find that specification, but I found a grammar description
On 16.10.2009, at 03:35, Graham Cox wrote:
On 16/10/2009, at 12:30 PM, Roland King wrote:
I'm ploughing it with you, I hate it too and spend 30 seconds every
time I let XCode stub out a function for me moving the brace onto
the correct line,
On 16/10/2009, at 7:12 PM, Uli Kusterer wrote:
But you don't have to let Xcode frustrate you like this - you can
define your own templates for all of the stubs it inserts.
How? Where?!!! :-D
http://arstechnica.com/apple/guides/2009/04/cocoa-dev-design-your-own-xcode-project-templates.ars
Woah,
I'm sorry everybody... only when I saw my post in the list I realized
that my copy-paste from Safari contained spacer GIFs. Here's the
story again.
---
If it's a feature, then it's definitely a new one since the original
specification of Objective-C. It turned out to be
On Oct 16, 2009, at 3:55 AM, Bill Bumgarner wrote:
I haven't booted my NS 0.8 cube in about a decade, but I'm pretty
sure the semi-colon was always required in the header file and
always allowed in the @implementation.
'Twas many a moon ago, but, I do distinctly remember triple-clicking
On Oct 16, 2009, at 2:55 AM, Bill Bumgarner wrote:
On Oct 16, 2009, at 12:17 AM, Sander Stoks wrote:
If it's a feature, then it's definitely a new one since the
original specification of Objective-C. It turned out to be
surprisingly hard to find that specification, but I found a grammar
1) I've seen an alternative way of defining a method, with the
semicolon after the declaration, before the body:
- (NSArray *)sortedIncredients; -- notice the semicolon
{
...
}
2) ... versus the standard declaration + body of the definition
(without the semicolon):
-
On Oct 15, 2009, at 6:54 PM, Frederick C. Lee wrote:
Is there any benefit of (1) over (2) or is it merely style of
programming?
IMHO (1) should not be allowed, because you can't write C functions
that way (the compiler throws a parsing error if you do that), so it's
odd that you can
On 16/10/2009, at 11:54 AM, Frederick C. Lee wrote:
Both seem to work the same.
Is there any benefit of (1) over (2) or is it merely style of
programming?
(1) isn't really an alternative way of implementing a method, it's
just that the trailing semicolon is ignored. I'm not even sure if
Graham Cox wrote:
On 16/10/2009, at 11:54 AM, Frederick C. Lee wrote:
Both seem to work the same.
Is there any benefit of (1) over (2) or is it merely style of
programming?
(1) isn't really an alternative way of implementing a method, it's just
that the trailing semicolon is ignored.
On 16/10/2009, at 12:30 PM, Roland King wrote:
I'm ploughing it with you, I hate it too and spend 30 seconds every
time I let XCode stub out a function for me moving the brace onto
the correct line,
andputtingspacesbackbetweenparanetheses,bracketsandarguments so I
have a hope in hell of
Agree 2000%!
Same here.
A side note: in (Objective-)C you can also type jibberish after the
trailing quote of an #include and it gets ignored (at least with GCC,
not sure about Clang.) Not as useful as the semicolon bug, but I think
it helps illuminate just because you can, doesn't mean you
I keep meaning to file an enhancement request for the space before
()'s, I have to go back and manually change every occurrence and then
add spaces after the commas in the function arguments.
I also prefer
- (void)foo
{
}
over
- (void)foo {
}
Regards, Rob.
On 16 Oct 2009, at 02:30,
Hi Rols,
The same happened to me once. Accidently part of copy paste from header to
.m, it happened that structure. But why Objective C compiler won't give any
error for this. Really frustrating.
Regards
Mustafa
On Fri, Oct 16, 2009 at 10:32 AM, Robert Tillyard r...@atvetsystems.comwrote:
I
Ric
1) I've seen an alternative way of defining a method, with the
semicolon after the declaration, before the body:
- (NSArray *)sortedIncredients; -- notice the semicolon
{
...
}
2) ... versus the standard declaration + body of the definition
(without the semicolon):
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