This morning, Xcode 9.0 (9A235) shows a new/strange Auto Complete box that is not at all what it used to be. How do I get the full auto-complete box so that autocomplete looks like how it usually does?
Try:
Go to Xcode > Preferences > Text Editing
Under Code completion - Uncheck 'Suggest completions while typing'
Quit out of Xcode and then relaunch Xcode.
Go to Xcode > Preferences > Text Editing again
Quit out of Xcode and then relaunch Xcode.
Now go to Code completion and check 'Suggest completions while typing'.
Try typing library function or enum and enjoy!
Deleting the DERIVED DATA folder seemed to fix my issue. Thanks to this post: swift println() not showing autocomplete options while writting code
Things to try:
#1
Run this command in the project directory if you use cocoapods:
rm -rf ~/Library/Caches/CocoaPods;
rm -rf Pods; rm -rf ~/Library/Developer/Xcode/DerivedData/*;
pod deintegrate; pod setup; pod install;
#2
**Clean Cached Data**
Clean the Project -> Cmd+Shift+K
Clean the Build Folder -> Cmd+Shift+Option+K
If you skipped step one:
Delete Derived Data
Xcode Preferences -> Locations ->
Arrow Symbol Takes you to DerrivedData -> Delete Folder
#3
**Check your Build Phase's Compile Sources.**
Every .swift and .m file in the project should be in this list or it won't autocomplete in those files.
#4
**Optimize your Editor:**
Use fileprivate* on every class property and function that you can to reduce the scope of the Compilers work per item.
Write modular/OOP code so you have less code for the compiler to read.
Avoid using Type Inferance when the result is a complex calculation, and try to break down complex calculations into let this = smallerOperation statements
* In Swift 4 private became stricter than fileprivate
In Xcode 12 there have been significant improvements in how often deleting derived data is necessary (though freezing has increased).
Xcode Version 11.0 (11A420a)
I have tried the solution from Lal Krishna for Xcode V11.0. It worked a few times but later I got no result.
I found one solution. You must delete two files:
Library/Developer/Xcode/Derived Data (as described before)
Library/Developer/Xcode/UserData/IDEEditorInteractivityHistory
That solution helps me now. May be useful for others 😉
This can happen when the file is not a member of the Target. Open the file where autocomplete is not working and show the the "Utilities" tab in the top right of Xcode (blue in the screenshot below).
Ensure your Target (typically your app's name) is checked. Autocomplete should work almost instantly without restarting Xcode, cleaning, or deleting Derived Data.
If it is already checked, make sure to uncheck and recheck it again. For me, it did the trick.
I'm using Xcode 10.2 and I had the same issue.
This answer from axel helped me to fix.
Anyway, I'm going to describe a bit more:
Go to YourProject.xcodeproj by clicking with Right Mouse Click and open Show Package Contents
Go to xcuserdata and delete your youruser.xcuserdatad
If you have also the xcworkspace(if you already have any pods installed) then do step 3&4, if not then just skip step 3&4:
Go to YourProject.xcworkspace by clicking with Right Mouse Click and open Show Package Contents
Go to xcuserdata and delete your youruser.xcuserdatad
Quit Xcode
Delete Derived Data by using Terminal:
rm -rf ~/Library/Developer/Xcode/DerivedData
Open Xcode and check if it works.
This can also happen if you redundantly named your files. For example,
Data.swift
Data.swift
Here's a bit of workaround but works.
Clean the project... Command + Shift + K
Clean the build folder... Command + Shift + Options(Alt) + K
Delete derived data for the project...
This can be done with the help of this link:
How can I delete derived data in Xcode 9?
Close XCode.
Reopen XCode (let the indexing complete) and Build the project... Command + B
Once it will be done with building, The suggestions will be back. I have tried it twice.
Update:
Sometimes the issue can be as simple as Duplicate file names.
Carefully check if any new file names added by you are conflicting with older files.
In Xcode 11.4, even if you move an existing file to another group, the suggestions disappear. This can be cured simply by restarting Xcode.
Removing the file from the Test Targets fixed my problem.
After a long time of searching, I finally fixed the issue for me. In Xcode > Preferences > Text Editing, in "Code Completion", I had "Use Escape key to show completion suggestions" checked for some reason. As soon as I unchecked this box, auto completion worked like a charm, without even needing to restart Xcode! (Xcode 10)
Please try doing this:
Select the file >> check if the file is added to UITesting or UnitTesting targets (File inspector -> Target Membership). If so, please uncheck those two and make sure only the project target is selected. Then build and try if autocomplete is working fine.
This worked for me. Hope it help someone.
For Xcode 11.4 (11E146)
Back Slash in folder name breaking the autocompletion feature, If this is the case remove it and build again.
I added here what was going on in my project just in case it can help someone else... I had 2 files with the same name and I didn't realise.
Just lost a day trying to solve the autocomplete nightmare of Xcode (9.2). Deleting derived data seemed to work briefly then things reverted. Reboots etc and other suggested voodoo failed to make a difference.
I gave up and download the 30 day trial of AppCode from Jet Brains. Autocomplete worked fine there and this maybe coincidence but it then started working again in my project in Xcode. Can't guarantee that it'll keep working...
It seems to be file specific in my case (Xcode 9.2) For me the fix was:
Delete problem file (remove reference)
Clean and Build
Add file back into the project (I did not check test targets)
Build again
Finally after 3 hours of trying everything - autocomplete works as it should.
Problems mostly because there are missing location of some files in project navigator (build errors)
Press command+1 to open Project Navigator pane
Check if there are any missing files
Or you can:
Delete DerivedData (command+shift+K)
Clean build folder (command+shift+option+K)
Press build again (command+B)
You should see build error that Xcode could not find some files that prevent build tool to process auto complete.
Correct and fix any missing files that you see.
Hope this helps
Use Command + B
or Command + R to Build or Run the project
Xcode sometimes messes up ;)
Xcode 11.3, macOS catalina
process parsecd achieve 100% of cpu, so kill it helps me
goto underneath directory and delete all folders on it.
{Your User}/Library/Developer/Xcode/DeriveData
It worked for me.
For me it was happening in my test file, because it wasn't part of a target for some reason. Setting it's target membership solved the issue.
For me, the problem occured when I discarded all the changes of one file (under Source Control > Commit), which effectively deleted the file. This is what I wanted and I thought that the file and all references to it would be delted too.
However, there was still a reference to the file (shown in red) in the Project navigator. Deleting the (now non-existant) file in the Project navigator magically brought auto-completion back.
No amount of cleaning, deleting derived data, etc helped. I only realized the deleted file was still showing when I tried to build my project, which of course failed because it couldnt find that file.
Hope this will help someone save 30 minutes :)
check whether you selected the Suggest completions while typing in Xcode -> Preferences -> Text Editing
navigate to user->Library->Developer->Xcode->DerivedData in Finder and delete the DerivedData folder
My case might appear too specific to help, but it might give someone an idea of how to solve broken auto-completion. Xcode 10.2.1.
In my case, auto-complete stopped working entirely and non of these other answers helped me. In addition, the fan on the computer could be heard to go louder indicating something was overworking (no other apps running), it should be noted I was editing on a MacBook Pro laptop. It seemed to be linked with the editor struggling to parse the equation I'd written:
switch mtype {
case .indeterminate:
newPosition.x = (frame.width - mainFigureText.frame.width) / 2
case .right:
newPosition.x = (((frame.width / 2) - mainFigureText.frame.width) / 2) + (frame.width / 2)
case .left:
newPosition.x = (((frame.width / 2) - mainFigureText.frame.width) / 2)
}
I was looking to animate a text view left, right, or to the middle depending on user prefs. The newPosition is a CGPoint that the text will animate to. Anyway, I split the equations up and all of a sudden auto-complete started working and the fan went quiet! I've been able to recreate this specific problem more than once by re-typing the above code and then replacing it with:
let halfFrameWidth: CGFloat = frame.width / 2
let middleLeft = (halfFrameWidth - mainFigureText.frame.width) / 2
switch doseType {
case .right:
newPosition.x = middleLeft + halfFrameWidth
case .left:
newPosition.x = middleLeft
default:
newPosition.x = (frame.width - mainFigureText.frame.width) / 2
}
I would like to add one more to the pile of solutions, because it is the only one that worked for me and is nowhere to be found here.
Xcode normally comes with two default build configuration for every project. Release & Debug. I have an extra one for my unit tests called Testing. In Xcode 10.1, 10.2, 10.3 and 11 beta, the new build system does not seem to like it and will only auto-complete if you either use Release or Debug. Any custom build configuration breaks auto-completion in mixed (swift + objc) project with unit tests.
I faced the same problem in Xcode 11.3.1. In my case The issue was cause due to duplicate file names / Deleted file name. Better to run the application once and check whether there are any deleted files/classes so that you will get a syntax error.
This Link helped me. Open the Build Settings & fill the framework search paths. See the below image.
Build errors can break the autocompletion feature in Xcode.
I had the issue with 100% not working auto-complete, none of written here helped. One thing I noticed – it was broken right after adding some entities into .xcdatamodel file, which have codegen class definition by default.
So I wasn't surprised when using old-style codegen none (and generating classes of course) fixed the issue immediately, even without restarting the xcode.
With Xcode 11.1, simply performing Clean Build Folder or deleting derived data was not enough to fix autocomplete.
Only after restarting my Mac, everything was back to normal
If you have issue with weird completion/auto-completion/intellisense (not showing default stuff like delegates and datasource protocols methods) just change your target (e.g. from simulator iPhone 8 to real device), build the project and switch back to your original target.
Similar with issues with Interface Builder (storyboards) not showing anything, but only "nothing selected" whenever you select any part of the view. Just switch to other Xib/Storyboard (or even create new), check if it works there and switch back.
These workarounds worked for me in both cases (had both issues in one day with one project on Xcode 10.2.1). From what I've seen all over internet forums it seems these are bugs never fixed since Xcode 6.x or so.
Cheers!
So, the question describes itself.
I want to edit the log after each build to cut out swift 3 ugly warnings like Result of call to '...' is unused
In Xcode > Preferences > Locations you can define (or automatically accept the default path ~/Library/Developer/Xcode/DerivedData/) the location of the 'DerivedData' folder which is where the build logs are stored.
Go there and tap the -> arrow to see the folder organization. Apple introduces unique folder name extensions which would have to be determined and built into any script that would analyze or process the log.
You could always go to your target settings and set the "Inhibit All Warnings" checkbox to ON.
As for editing the transcript directly, I suspect this is something you can't easily do, as build transcripts can be exported (hold down the control key while clicking on a build log in the Report Navigator in the left side of the Xcode project window) and I think they must be stored in some Apple System Log-like binary format.
I have been working with an iOS application in Xcode and, until about an hour ago, was steadily improving the software, and making Time Machine backups every hour or two. Then, as mentioned at What is causing this secondary damage? , I broke something and the problem was alleged in old boilerplate code.
I thought that I would use Time Machine to restore a "last known good" checkpoint, but Time Machine said I didn't have permissions. So I manually copied the past two or so known good backups, and Xcode claimed identical build errors, in the same two lines of boilerplate project code.
It seems to me that Xcode stores more state than in the project directory itself.
Is there a way to get Xcode to forget it knows the syntax errors, let go of that state completely, and process the code as of the last checkpoint or two where things have been working?
I'd appreciate knowing how to reset whatever state is finding those syntax errors in old and new versions of the project.
Two options:
Quick: Xcode top menu bar > Product > Clean
Thorough:
Close your project, but not Xcode.
Xcode top menu bar > Windows > Organizer > Projects
Select your project in the left navigation bar.
Once selected, there should be a "Delete..." button on the far right, for "Derived Data" -- press it.
Re-open your project, let it index stuff, and try building again.
Also, I strongly recommend learning/using Source Control. Xcode has it built-in now!
Today, I have update my xCode to 4.2 version, And I want to disable the ARC, I also search with the google. but can't fix my problem. According the search results, In the target setting, I can't find the 'Objective-C Automatic reference counting' item, So have no chance to set it to NO. I find the item one by one, and also use the search field.
And one know the newest Xcode4.2 ,how to disable the ARC for the project, not for the specific file.
Thanks very much.
Click on you project, in the left hand organizer.
Select your target, in the next column over.
Select the Build Settings tab at the top.
Scroll down to "Objective-C Automatic Reference Counting" (it may be listed as "CLANG_ENABLE_OBJC_ARC" under the User-Defined settings group),
and set it to NO.
This is on Xcode 4.2 (Build 4D199).
In Xcode 4.2 beta, there were 2 places per target that you could toggle the use of ARC... now there seems to be NONE.
Also, the "Convert to ARC" menu item seems to have disappeared.
Now, yes, I suppose that the ARC stuff was never meant for Mac Developers, as 4.2 beta was iOS only, but not exactly sure what Mac developers who did play with the ARC stuff in their Mac Apps are supposed to do now....
File Radar Reports. Wait for 4.3? redo the app? Edit the .xcode XML manually? Not sure.
Disable ARC or enable MRC
You should operate by C flags
//enable ARC
-fobjc-arc
//disable ARC
-fno-objc-arc
You have three options:
Local - Compile Sources
Global - OTHER_CFLAGS
Global - CLANG_ENABLE_OBJC_ARC
[Under the hood]