Re: What is the rationale behind keeping preferences in one place and "Application Support" files in another?
Re: What is the rationale behind keeping preferences in one place and "Application Support" files in another?
- Subject: Re: What is the rationale behind keeping preferences in one place and "Application Support" files in another?
- From: Andrei Tchijov <email@hidden>
- Date: Thu, 8 Dec 2005 13:49:01 -0500
To shift discussion from question of preferences... Is it good policy
to expect/allow that content of "Application Support" folder can
disappear at any time?
On Dec 8, 2005, at 1:41 PM, John Stiles wrote:
On Dec 8, 2005, at 10:45 AM, Philip Ershler wrote:
On Dec 8, 2005, at 11:29 AM, Andy Armstrong wrote:
On 8 Dec 2005, at 18:22, John Stiles wrote:
I don't think those things are relevant to end users.
Remember, we're developers. We are all a special case.
I can't quite believe the arrogance of this. Are we not also end
users? There's a useful mechanism there and we're contemplating
breaking it not for any particular technical advantage but
because we've decided that it's not useful to mere mortals?
Two points,
1. Users expect to find preference files in the preference folder.
2. What is the advantage of putting preferences in the Application
Support Folder?
Maybe my original post was unclear...?!
Point 1: I agree.
Point 2: There is no advantage.
_______________________________________________
Do not post admin requests to the list. They will be ignored.
Cocoa-dev mailing list (email@hidden)
Help/Unsubscribe/Update your Subscription:
This email sent to email@hidden
_______________________________________________
Do not post admin requests to the list. They will be ignored.
Cocoa-dev mailing list (email@hidden)
Help/Unsubscribe/Update your Subscription:
This email sent to email@hidden