Auto Layout
I just can't quit you
I've learned to love Auto Layout, but it wasn't always so.
In the beginning I tried to use it. Really, I did. Despite my best efforts, I ran into a huge wall of failure. Then I went back to springs and struts.
The second time, I read the tutorials, watched the WWDC videos, tried to achieve Zen, and became familiar . . .
Immutability and Thread Safety
it depends on what the definition of "is" is
When I talk about immutable collections and immutable objects being thread-safe, what do I really mean by that?
Part of what makes traditional multithreaded programming so difficult is that you never have truly accurate information about the state of things. If you ask a list "are you empty?" and the list says . . .
Why I Love UIKit
simple but easy
I don't want my ranting and complaining to give the impression that I dislike UIKit; quite the opposite in fact.
Here's a simple piece of code I just wrote:
self.brightnessLabel = [[UILabel alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectMake(0, 0, self.view.bounds.size.width, self.view.bounds.size.height)];
self.brightnessLabel. . . .
UIDatePicker: how I hate you
no, seriously
Oh UIDatePicker how I hate thee.
While working on Storm Sim for iOS 7 I ran into a problem on the Sleep Timer screen. There, I am using a UIDatePicker in countdown timer mode. This is what it looked like (I had already given up on trying to get a dark background for that screen; the UIDatePicker won't let you change text color.)
. . .Don't Run You Own Servers
Let me disagree with Marco Arment
Marco was getting into it with Oliver Haslam over server hosting, and see this post by Brent Simmons. Marco extolled the virtues of running your own VPS or Virtual Private Server. He suggested that you learn Linux administration and port forwarding; that you learn how to setup mysql log shipping and read-only replicas.
Thanks, but no . . .
Apple and C#?
when i wish upon a star
I was listening to Debug #32: John Siracusa on Copland 2010 in which the subject of Apple needing a next-generation language was discussed.
The elephant in the room seems to be why not take advantage of C#? Guy and John both seemed to dismiss it out of hand, but it hits all the requirements:
- It's an ECMA standard, . . .
Seriously Apple?
Try opening this file with Keynote 09
I understand you updated your apps; that's totally cool.
What isn't cool is giving me a message that my presentation is too old and to try opening it with Keynote 09. Which I no longer have.
Would it have killed you to take that conversion code, package it up, and embed it in the new Keynote? You know, like a sane . . .