Looking at creating a custom cell for a table view, with only 3 UIImageViews, and would like each to be loaded from a different entry in an XML that is parsed, and each to respond differently when touched...what would be best way to do this? I looked at the AQGridView and it seems overkill for what I am wanting
@SriPriya From the crash log, that is what i could say. If you can try finding occurrences of PJSTRString in your project. And make sure it isn't called on some other kind of objects than it should.
I'm trying to transform one method call into another dynamically (at runtime).
For instance, I'd like the following:
[obj foo]
to delegate to:
[obj getAttribute: @"foo"]
(I'd like to do this dynamically as I don't know ahead of time what those method names or attributes are going to be).
...
The question is will this work as a setter/getter?
If I use -forwardInvocation
because unfortunately it wont even let me compile
for example: [callbackInstance fence:@"fence"]; "No visible interface for Callback Classs declares the selector fence"
However my callback class does implement forward invocatoin:
- (void)forwardInvocation:(NSInvocation *)anInvocation
{
NSLog(@"The invocation object is %@", anInvocation);
}
I'm writing a clone of OpenStruct in Objective-C, using forwardInvocation:. However, the compiler isn't aware of the forwarding at compile time apparently. Compiling with ARC gives me a ton of warnings.
The code is open source and available on Github, but is currently compiled with -fno-objc-arc...
@Laddu you know that is bad for you. If you want to sleep easily, you should always keep electronic away from your bed area. (program your body for bed)
@Canelo so push +1 to X with no animation, then switch
If the specified key does not exist, the receiver is sent a setValue:forUndefinedKey: message. The default implementation of setValue:forUndefinedKey: raises an NSUndefinedKeyException; however, subclasses can override this method to handle the request in a custom manner.
I thought the key is specified as a string in the parameter. This requires additional stuff?
@Nils Deserialized meaning? We need to specify the storyboard file name in the info.plist key main storyboard and it will be done for us automatically. If we have created project with storyboard option checked, then it's done for us already.
I'm new in Core Data, and i got a problem i can't get my head around how to do "the right way"
I'll try and examplify my problem.
I got a entity Car. And a list of all the cars in my program. The cars have some attributes, but they are not predefined. So for each car i want to be able to define...
for the approach i been tyring to accomplish for the past 3 hours. Basically, I have a callback that gets run during viewonload, but i dont want the methods to be in callback because callback is used for different controllers, and i want it separate.
So i thought about creating dynamic methods and using forwardinvocation to pass the method invocation off to the controller which the callback is invoked at. But Sam recommended to use key/value coding. Problem with that is i have to define the keys as attributes in the callback and i dont want the callbnack to know anything aobut the controler.
so I am left with that post above as the only toher altenrative
@Byte [this](http://pastebin.com/K17QM8k4) code gives what i want in a way but when i try to share data between classes(i'm using sharedData= (BNT_AppDelegate *)([[UIApplication sharedApplication]delegate]); for this ) only one object comes to other class
Terminating app due to uncaught exception 'NSUnknownKeyException', reason: '[<CallbackClass 0x7b6c5d0> setValue:forUndefinedKey:]: this class is not key value coding-compliant for the key fence.'
Q: I have a NSString that I need to convert to an int, increment by 1, and convert back to a NSString. I can't fighure out how to do that without running into ARC... can someone help me please?
I have a class called mycallback:
[mycallback setValue:[code objectForKey:@"abc"] forKey:@"abc"];
It gets called for a lot of my controllers. THe thing is i pull data from a mysql database and I send it to mycallback. So I may not know what the key is. And in addition to that, I don't want to ...
@Sam there examples are oversimplified. They declare instance variables and thats why their examples work. I dont want to have instance variables in my callback class and also i may not know what the keys are until runtime.
i know but I dont want to put instance variables in my callback class and i also may not know what the key is until runtime
so is there some solution?
can I somehow dynamically create the key?
thats what I thought that one post i linked before was doing but they were using some framework called core data that exposed a property called "propery"
I have a class called mycallback:
[mycallback setValue:[code objectForKey:@"abc"] forKey:@"abc"];
It gets called for a lot of my controllers. THe thing is i pull data from a mysql database and I send it to mycallback. So I may not know what the key is. And in addition to that, I don't want to ...
There’s no question about the high popularity of book and magazine apps in the iPhone and especially the iPad store. In the past I’ve listed some great libraries that allow you to easily make a magazine/book iOS app from a PDF or a set of images. I’ve also mentioned a tutorial for getting your app [...]
Hi all. I'm trying to figure out how to set the initial first responder for a view defined in a storyboard. I've found some places that say it's a window property, but storyboards don't give you any access to that so no joy. (I'm a noob too, in case that isn't obvious.) Anyone done this before?
BTW for now I'm just doing it in viewDidLoad. Just seems like you should be able to do it in the storyboard editor.