Re: Automatic population of NSTableView with custom columns at launch time
Re: Automatic population of NSTableView with custom columns at launch time
- Subject: Re: Automatic population of NSTableView with custom columns at launch time
- From: Corbin Dunn <email@hidden>
- Date: Mon, 04 Aug 2008 16:45:15 -0700
On Aug 4, 2008, at 4:32 PM, Rick Hoge wrote:
Hmmm. Does not seem to be doing it.
Unfortunately, I'm out of ideas; these were mainly off the top of my
head. Without seeing your specific source code, I can't offer any more
suggestions -- it is quite possible something else is wrong (ie: the
identifier isn't set). You probably want to debug the app to find out
why/when your columns are being removed, and go from there. You can
try breaking on the internal tableview methods,
_readPersistentTableColumns and _writePersistentTableColumns, however,
these methods are purely internal, and may be removed in future
releases. In other words, don't call them or override them.
You are correct, step #3 shouldn't be required.
If all else fails, you may have to hand-roll a solution where you
don't use the tableview logic, and store out the widths/table columns
yourself.
-corbin
I set autoSaveFileName to nil in the nib file, then do the following
in my code:
1) add the new table columns (addTableColumn: etc.)
2) call setAutosaveName:@"someFile" , call setAutosaveTableColumns:YES
3) manually change width of table column in UI just in case this
will force an autosave
4) quit app
On next launch, the column I added in step 1 is not there. Changes
to width of columns defined in the nib are preserved though.
Also is step 3 really needed to force an autosave? Ideally the
added columns would have to be 'remembered' even if the user does
not resize any...
thanks for the suggestions, though!
Rick
On 4-Aug-08, at 7:05 PM, Corbin Dunn wrote:
Are you calling setAutosaveName: yourself? Set it to nil in the
nib. Then, call it yourself. Before you call it, print out all the
table columns to see what they are. Then, load your tablecolumns
that you want (add new ones). Then call
setAutosaveName:<something>. Change the width of a column in your
GUI. This should save out the autosave values. Quit your app.
Restart it. Are the columns restored?
This pattern should work; I use it internally in the open and save
panel.
corbin
On Aug 4, 2008, at 3:36 PM, Rick Hoge wrote:
Thanks for the suggestion -
I tried calling setAutosaveTableColumns: after adding a column
from code, but on next launch it only showed the columns that are
defined in the nib with IB.
Rick
On 4-Aug-08, at 5:39 PM, Corbin Dunn wrote:
If you add all the columns (and remove old ones) before calling
setAutosaveName:, or setAutosaveTableColumns:, then it should
work out okay; it will restore all of the widths, positions, etc.
corbin
On Aug 4, 2008, at 2:03 PM, Rick Hoge wrote:
I'm working on an application that will allow users to add
columns of descriptive information to an NSTableView - the
available columns are determined at launch time by loading a
dictionary.
In my test app, I can add columns to my table no problem. Now I
am trying to decide on a robust and efficient way to make sure
that the set of columns chosen by the user, and their geometry,
is saved when quitting the app and restored at the next launch.
I can think of a number of brute force ways to do it - save an
array of column identifiers and/or value bindings to user
preferences, for example.
I know it's possible to autosave column layout information under
Leopard through the framework, and this appears to work. The
autosave info appears to restore the geometry of columns defined
in the nib file, but it won't force a reload of columns created
programatically in the last session. I suspect that the
autosave file may actually contain the identifiers of all
columns displayed as of the last application quit, and wonder if
there is a way, during nib loading, to access this list so I can
initialize the table.
I don't like having the same information stored multiple places
(i.e. my own NSArray in user prefs replicating info that might
be more complete in the NSTableView autosave file) if I can
avoid it, but can't seem to find a way to get at all the info in
this file.
If anyone has some good examples of how this can be done, or
some past experience to share on what works well, I'd be very
grateful.
(43092.6825)
(43092.6825)
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