On 13 Jul 2015, at 22:58, Roland King r...@rols.org wrote:
On 14 Jul 2015, at 12:28, Joar Wingfors j...@joar.com wrote:
Hi Roland,
With the information currently provided I cannot say what’s wrong with your
current setup. If you can attach your project to a bug report and send it
On 14 Jul 2015, at 12:28, Joar Wingfors j...@joar.com wrote:
Hi Roland,
With the information currently provided I cannot say what’s wrong with your
current setup. If you can attach your project to a bug report and send it to
us I imagine we could quickly identify why it isn’t working.
On Jul 10, 2015, at 8:26 PM, Marco S Hyman wrote:
NOOO.
That will only work until you restart Xcode. We found that out the hard way
sharing our repo across 3 continents. Everyone had Xcode fail with file
not found in index when we each relaunched the project.
??? I think
I ran into an issue a few days ago where Xcode 6.4 started showing the
simulator UUID instead of the version number in the device selection pull-down
menu:
https://www.dropbox.com/s/jvoip1nb06ud7jn/Screenshot%202015-07-10%2009.37.43.png?dl=0
I’m not set up to verify at this very moment, but I believe that Xcode 7
offers more verbose logging of this type of dyld failures during testing.
Joar
I’m on 7b3 here and all the logging I found was the “failed to bootstrap” line
from the original mail. If more verbose logging
Xcode 7 beta 3; Deployment Target 8.4; iPad Air iOS 8.4
Xcode 6.4 no problem; but Xcode 7 refuses to play with my iPad (cited as
“unavailable”), because: “Could not find Developer Disk Image”.
What does that mean, how can I fix this?
Gerriet.
___
OK, I try this and it seems to work. However, the git history is kind of
unexpected.
When I click on the file in Xcode and show the git history in the Version
editor, Xcode says ‘This file does not exist in the index.’ Selecting some
previous revisions in the popup has mixed results. Sometimes
On Jul 14, 2015, at 12:30 , Doug Hill xcodeus...@breaqz.com wrote:
Just as a point of clarification, I’m referring to the Show Assistant Editor
button at the top-left of the window.
As a point of clarification, you might mention which version of Xcode you’re
using. There was a bug, in Xcode
OK, I think I get it now.
• Open a .m source file
• Click on Show the Assistant Editor
- Shows the corresponding .h.
• Command-click on a symbol in the .h (for example NSObject to show it’s
interface)
• Click on Show the Standard Editor to dismiss the Assistant editor.
• Select a totally
On Jul 14, 2015, at 11:56 AM, Scott Ribe scott_r...@elevated-dev.com wrote:
There's a popup menu up there from which you can select counterparts. As
long as you select files by clicking them in the files tree on the left, it
will automatically open the counterpart in the assistant editor.
On Jul 14, 2015, at 12:46 , Doug Hill xcodeus...@breaqz.com wrote:
While this Counterparts popup menu is useful,
Um, you only have to choose Counterparts once. The setting sticks across
closings and reopenings of the assistant editor. That’s the point of it, really.
my criticism is it’s
On Jul 14, 2015, at 12:24 PM, Jens Alfke j...@mooseyard.com wrote:
On Jul 14, 2015, at 12:15 PM, Doug Hill xcodeus...@breaqz.com
mailto:xcodeus...@breaqz.com wrote:
• Command-click on a symbol in the .h (for example NSObject to show it’s
interface)
• Click on Show the Standard
On Jul 14, 2015, at 12:38 PM, Doug Hill xcodeus...@breaqz.com wrote:
On Jul 14, 2015, at 12:24 PM, Jens Alfke j...@mooseyard.com
mailto:j...@mooseyard.com wrote:
On Jul 14, 2015, at 12:15 PM, Doug Hill xcodeus...@breaqz.com
mailto:xcodeus...@breaqz.com wrote:
• Command-click on
On Jul 14, 2015, at 12:15 PM, Doug Hill xcodeus...@breaqz.com wrote:
• Command-click on a symbol in the .h (for example NSObject to show it’s
interface)
• Click on Show the Standard Editor to dismiss the Assistant editor.
If you use the Back command in between those steps, it restores the
On Jul 14, 2015, at 12:40 PM, Quincey Morris
quinceymor...@rivergatesoftware.com wrote:
On Jul 14, 2015, at 12:30 , Doug Hill xcodeus...@breaqz.com
mailto:xcodeus...@breaqz.com wrote:
Just as a point of clarification, I’m referring to the Show Assistant Editor
button at the top-left
Here’s a couple of pet peeves that have been driving me nuts since whenever.
1. When editing a file I click on the Assistant editor button (e.g. the
overlapping circles), and I expect to to see the corresponding .h or
.m/.c/.cpp. However it often shows some other totally non-related file,
On Jul 14, 2015, at 12:49 PM, Doug Hill xcodeus...@breaqz.com wrote:
1. When editing a file I click on the Assistant editor button (e.g. the
overlapping circles), and I expect to to see the corresponding .h or
.m/.c/.cpp. However it often shows some other totally non-related file,
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