I am trying to show line numbers in an NSTexView. I was using the solution from http://www.noodlesoft.com/blog/2008/10/05/displaying-line-numbers-with-nstextview/ but it is no more working with Lion.
Do you know an alternative solution?
I think you probably need an updated version of the files for 64bit (Lion).
I forked the NoodleKit project on GitHub and made some changes that I found on the web. I made some small tweaks, but the changes here mostly came from others on the Internet and the original repo. The owner of the repo has not updated the NoodleLineNumberview in two years, but I may send a pull request so he will add it to his repo. These classes are working in my Lion projects, so they should work for you.
Update your project with these new files and then try to compile:
NoodleLineNumberMarker.h
NoodleLineNumberMarker.m
NoodleLineNumberView.h
NoodleLineNumberView.m
If you are using the MarkerLineNumberView that came with an old version of the project, then that will not work here. Just replace those objects with NoodleLineNumberView.
Related
I am working on a fork of the Xbox HID project (to allow greater configuration of the controller) and came across a really strange issue.
The project is three projects, which I have grouped together under a workspace, which works well, it compiles them in order (kext, daemon and prefpane) and all works.
However, I decided to uncrustify the code (thanks Alcatraz!) and standardise the names and locations of source files. This required me to update the project as file paths changed.
Once this was all completed the PrefPane wouldn't load. For some reason it was instantiating and sending initWithBundle to an object that was NOT the File's Owner in the XIB.
After a lot of debugging and hair-pulling I discovered the object it was instantiating also happened to be the first file listed in the Compile Sources build phase. Once I moved the correct file to the top of that list the PrefPane once again launched and worked as expected.
That seems wrong, why does it need to compile this particular class first... better yet, why is it picking up only the first compiled class instead of the one specified in the XIB?
I am using Xcode Version 6.2 (6C131e) under OSX 10.9.5, however, I am using the OSX 10.6 SDK and have 10.6 as the deployment target.
I was having some other issues with the project in question, so I rebuilt all three projects and this issue went away.
I am guessing there was some sort of issue with the Xcode project itself as I believe it was probably upgraded from at least two previous major versions of Xcode.
Lesson here seems to be, rebuild the project files themselves and see if that fixes the issues!
I am new to xamarin and using XLab packages. I can see that Xlab packages are not stable yet however community is strongly supporting. In test
project I have added packages using Nugets. Now I found one issue in camera API of it so, how should I fix it. I have just
library files so, I can see code or fix it immediately.
Should I include the code of it? Because I can't wait for community to fix the issue and get the updated package of it? Yes If I will fix something then
I would love to contribute to open source community.
FYI: I am using PCL approach for development.
Best option would be to fork the GitHub repository and work on the sample application.
You can also get a copy of the source without cloning but then you cannot create a pull request for any code fixes. You can still report any bugs you find but it will be easier to contribute to the project by forking the project.
I am trying to move some code into a bower package, and my code depends on prototypejs. Prototypejs is not in the bower registry (or it wasn't-- actually I just added it incorrectly, so this question is a bit like asking how to avoid spilling milk after it is already running off the table). What is the proper way to go about getting it there?
I thought I could just point the registry to the prototypejs repo on github, but that resulted in a checkout of files which did not include a built prototype.js file, and it seems it can't be built with the latest version of ruby/rake. So, one option would be to create a new github repo with the built version (downloaded from the website) and a bower.json file. Development on prototypejs seems to have stalled (according to github), so it is unlikely the author(s) would be doing that anytime soon.
DISCLAIMER
I'm beating my own drum but this should help
My PrototypeJS repo has updates in it as well as can be built using grunt and has the actual finished build files in it. Please take a look and see if it works for you.
https://github.com/jwestbrook/prototype
I would create a repo with as you suggested for now, but still try to submit a PR on the upstream repo.
I'm asking this question again since the other one had an answer that did not work for me.
I'm getting this message when trying to rename a class, along with code sense and color syntax broken.
The file is in the build phase of the target.
I'have tried erasing the derived data to rebuild the index. I can see the index rebuilding but this does not help.
I'm using Xcode 4.2
I found it to be a bug in Xcode 4.1 under OS X 10.7.1 along side with other issues i had. When I reopen my project, the message was gone, refactoring worked as expected and auto-completing worked as well.
My install of Xcode 3.2.3 created a project with different template files than those of my classmates. We all created a navigation-based app that used core data.
I suspect that my templates are somehow left over from previous installs, whereas my classmates all have current templates.
Anyone else experienced this? Any suggestions for making sure I have the current templates?
If there are copies or customized versions in
~/Library/Application Support/Developer/Shared/Xcode/
they will be preferred over global (updated) versions, see e.g. this question.