• Open Menu Close Menu
  • Apple
  • Shopping Bag
  • Apple
  • Mac
  • iPad
  • iPhone
  • Watch
  • TV
  • Music
  • Support
  • Search apple.com
  • Shopping Bag

Lists

Open Menu Close Menu
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Lists hosted on this site
  • Email the Postmaster
  • Tips for posting to public mailing lists
Re: Setting is not defined in Project, Target or Application level, but not default either.
[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

Re: Setting is not defined in Project, Target or Application level, but not default either.


  • Subject: Re: Setting is not defined in Project, Target or Application level, but not default either.
  • From: Jerry Krinock <email@hidden>
  • Date: Tue, 4 Mar 2008 12:28:48 -0800


On 2008 Mar, 04, at 11:48, Scott Tooker wrote:

Hmm, if you go and look at an individual configuration in the UI, is the value shown in bold?

Short answer: no. I just stepped through the four "Show:" popup settings: "All Configurations", "Release", "ReleaseUnstripped" and "Debug", in both the Project Info and Target Info, and "Build Products Path". Result: All plain, never bold.


At this point, it certainly seems like there is a possible bug here.

Before doing this, I had found the reason why there are three "objects" for each of the three Build Configuration is that they are related to:


PBXProject "SSApp"
PBXNativeTarget "SSApp"
PBXNativeTarget "SSAppStatic"

That makes sense because I have these two targets and, of course, one project.

Matching the UUID-key-thingys, I see that the errant SYMROOT (="Build Product Location"?) settings are in the objects related to the PBXProject "SSApp".

Then, using BBEdit, I deleted the three lines:

    SYMROOT = "$(SRCROOT)/../../Builds";

Then I closed the project in Xcode, saved the file in BBEdit, reopened the project in Xcode, and found the same non-default Build Products Path still shown in the UI. So I quit Xcode. While quitting I got this error indicated:

File: /SourceCache/DevToolsBase/DevToolsBase-921/pbxcore/ Target.subproj/PBXTarget.m
Line: 3887
Object: <PBXNativeTarget:0x095c59c0>
Method: targetBuildContext


Assertion failed: (nil != [self project]) && ![[self project] isClosed]

Then I re-saved the file in BBEdit, relaunched Xcode, and found the same non-default Build Products Path still shown in the UI. I then quit Xcode again, re-read the file in BBEdit and found that Xcode had ^not^ restored those three lines. So where else might Xcode be getting this non-default Build Products Path?

Oh, well, I quit Xcode and then Time-Machined SSApp.xcodeproj back a few hours. Still perplexed here.
_______________________________________________
Do not post admin requests to the list. They will be ignored.
Xcode-users mailing list (email@hidden)
Help/Unsubscribe/Update your Subscription:

This email sent to email@hidden
  • Follow-Ups:
    • Re: Setting is not defined in Project, Target or Application level, but not default either.
      • From: Jerry Krinock <email@hidden>
References: 
 >Setting is not defined in Project, Target or Application level, but not default either. (From: Jerry Krinock <email@hidden>)
 >Re: Setting is not defined in Project, Target or Application level, but not default either. (From: Scott Tooker <email@hidden>)
 >Re: Setting is not defined in Project, Target or Application level, but not default either. (From: Jerry Krinock <email@hidden>)
 >Re: Setting is not defined in Project, Target or Application level, but not default either. (From: Scott Tooker <email@hidden>)
 >Re: Setting is not defined in Project, Target or Application level, but not default either. (From: Jerry Krinock <email@hidden>)
 >Re: Setting is not defined in Project, Target or Application level, but not default either. (From: Scott Tooker <email@hidden>)

  • Prev by Date: Re: Setting is not defined in Project, Target or Application level, but not default either.
  • Next by Date: Re: using lgamma_r
  • Previous by thread: Re: Setting is not defined in Project, Target or Application level, but not default either.
  • Next by thread: Re: Setting is not defined in Project, Target or Application level, but not default either.
  • Index(es):
    • Date
    • Thread