@jweyrich thats right, but dont be mad at me, the whole point of the conversation was, if I should create an instance for each "service class", OR there was kind of a "central-service class" that I could reference
Guice for example requires you to register types to be injected, but also allows you to write providers for each type, in which you can easily change the default behavior.
@WilliamX that's ok :-) I reinforce my point. If you class is lightweight, you can instance it every time you need it. Or have it as a property in your Controller class, and instance it once per controller.
thank you guys, I really appreciate your patience, I am actually a Senior Flex Programmer and its frustrating "the change" of paradigm and still ask some basic stuff like a common noob
@WilliamX we all went thru the same difficulties. I used to hate the Objective C syntax, but after a few months it feels like natural. I don't have to think anymore to use it.
Thats why I typically cancel the service (as user might press back button while it's going on) when view disappears and in next line release it as well (as the service shouldn't be needed if you go off screen, whether or not you move forward or backward).
@jweyrich I was referring to debugging in Xcode, its annoying to check a object and dont see what the properties have, you always need to write po User for example, and still the class has to overwritte the description property
@Silly sorry Silly, I didnt see where you used the cancel function, where did you place it in the example? in a delegate's function of the ViewNavigator?
@WilliamX You can get the permalink of a message, and bookmark it in your browser. Mouse over the message you want, and click in the arrow in the left, then click permalink, and bookmark it.
As I showed you - there is a cancel method in my service class. It cancel's the asynchronous URL connection. So if service is initiated and user hits back button before it's finished, it should be cancelled.
So when user hits back button, the controller pops out. viewWillDisappear: will get called. There I call [fetchCabs cancel]
I have a UIView that I draw on and fill a rectangle using CGContextFillRect. Is there a way that when that area is tapped, I can determine if indeed the rectangle is filled, rather than "clear"?
@WilliamX answering the introspecting thing again, you can set a breakpoint, wait until it's hit, then select the variable you want to check, mouse over it, and it will show a tooltip containing all properties and their values. You can navigate over complex types too.
Hmm. As I said it cancels the asynchronous url connection. Can you see the NSURLConnection instantiation in the service class method? The cancel method just in turn calls cancel on that instance.
if using KVO to take action when an NSOperationQueue's operationCount reaches 0, why might i receive (intermittently) several notifications? I've tried placing the check for operationCount == 0 in a synchronization block, to removing the observer when 0 is hit, to no avail. In the end I just ended up making the Queue serial vi maxConcurrent... :(