I don't know whether anyone will provide a rationale for the contract language,
but here's an interesting analysis of it:
http://daringfireball.net/2010/04/why_apple_changed_section_331
Apple makes a lot of smart calls that seem stupid or selfish at first. A number
of folks on Twitter have jump
Hi,
I asked the same question via Twitter, however I do not expect to get an answer
at this stage.
If my understanding is correct about why Apple has done this, in that it is
more due to "the need to support the new multitasking APIs in iPhone 4.0. The
system will now be evaluating apps as the
I suspect that no Apple employee will be able to comment on
this, but I _really_ hope MacRuby will be among the blessed
languages for the iPad, etc.
-r
--
http://www.cfcl.com/rdmRich Morin
http://www.cfcl.com/rdm/resume r...@cfcl.com
http://www.cfcl.com/rdm/weblog +1 650-873-7
Hi Daniel,
As Matt said, it is possible to trim out your .app bundle to only ship what's
really needed. If you do not need the standard library and extensions, removing
them might free some memory. I believe the min. size is about 20MB then (I'm
not exactly certain though), for both 32-bit and
Hi Russell,
Sorry for the late response.
OpenDirectory.framework ships with BridgeSupport annotations, so doing
"framework 'OpenDirectory'" should merge all symbols into MacRuby. If some are
missing, it's likely a bug in the BridgeSupport generator, that should be
reported via http://bugreport
#651: NSString#stringByDeletingPathExtension: not returning a String
---+
Reporter: koude...@… |Owner: lsansone...@…
Type: defect | Status: closed