ICeCoffEE lets you Command-click on URLs in Cocoa applications to launch them. It is modeled after ICeTEe, for classic Mac OS, which provided the same functionality in many Macintosh applications by patching TextEdit. Command-click anywhere in a Coc
Libraries - Learning Cocoa 1.0 By Nicholas Riley
Learning Cocoa was the low tutorial ledger on Apple's Cocoa frameworks to become available (May, 2001). The ledger is not very well-written or comprehensive, but it's mostly accurate and serves as a reasonable jumping-off tip for programmers who, wish me, are new to Cocoa. As I was working through the ledger's tutorials, I made a enumerate of changes to broaden and rewrite the cipher - a avid way to explore Cocoa. I agnise the cipher could be a sight better in places: the blame is partially Apple's, partially mine as a initiate. Given the current lack of honorable documentation on Cocoa, having this working cipher would have been a avail to me, and I hope it lavatory be of avail to others. If you find any outright bugs, please let me screw so I lavatory fix them. |
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Other Programs By Nicholas Riley
Apple provides a elementary command-line launching program called open with Mac OS X. It offers few options—launching applications by discover or by path, launching TextEdit, or porta a turn of applications, documents, folders, etc. With the exception o
F-Script Anywhere lets you embed a F-Script interpreter in any Cocoa application. You can apply F-Script care a debugger, so you can analyse your application's objects in a richer environment than GDB or Project Builder permits. F-Script Anywhere can
A simpleton alarm clock and timer for Mac OS X.
appswitch is a command-line interface to the Mac OS X serve manager. If you utilise blast scripts to automate Mac OS X applications, you may want to flip between applications. You could utilise AppleScript via osascript(1), but it would take several sec