On May 23, 2015, at 3:15 PM, Jens Alfke j...@mooseyard.com wrote:
On May 23, 2015, at 3:04 PM, Kate Stone katherine_st...@apple.com
mailto:katherine_st...@apple.com wrote:
You can evaluate an Objective-C expression in a Swift frame by overriding
the default language like so:
Thanks!
On May 28, 2015, at 4:24 PM, Kate Stone katherine_st...@apple.com wrote:
Register values can be readily used in C-based languages as if they were
pointers, but they have far less obvious meaning in a Swift context where
everything is more strongly typed and is safe by design.
I think
Hello,
I’m playing with storyboards on OSX in a project that does nothing. One of the
things I’m trying to do is open a second window from a second storyboard.
I’ve a class function in a sub-subclass of NSWindowController named
OtherWindowController that does this:
class func
I wrote:
Storyboard (NSStoryboard: 0x61004a60) doesn't contain a controller with
identifier ‘initial’
I also tried “instantiateInitialController”. No errors written to the
console but the returned value is nil.
What am I doing wrong?
Perhaps nothing. I looked at the storyboard
On May 28, 2015, at 21:20 , Marco S Hyman m...@snafu.org wrote:
Is this an Xcode bug
It looks like an Xcode bug, although it’s not what you think.
AFAICT, the bug is that when you change the storyboard identifier, Xcode
doesn’t actually save the identifier to the storyboard file until you
Dear All,
Ever since I copied my Obj-C / Swift project and added it to a new workspace,
MyApp-Swift.h no longer contains anything useful, except an empty :
@interface NSColor (SWIFT_EXTENSION(MyApp))
@end
No other class is mentioned and as a result I get “unknown type name” and other
errors
On May 26, 2015, at 1:59 PM, Fritz Anderson fri...@manoverboard.org wrote:
Please do not post the same question to two lists at once. You won’t get your
answer any sooner, respondents won’t be able to see each others’ replies, and
I almost replied on cocoa-dev, where your question is