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Re: Replacing the standard NSTextAttachmentCell in an NSTextView
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Re: Replacing the standard NSTextAttachmentCell in an NSTextView


  • Subject: Re: Replacing the standard NSTextAttachmentCell in an NSTextView
  • From: Douglas Davidson <email@hidden>
  • Date: Tue, 6 Nov 2007 09:10:53 -0800


On Nov 6, 2007, at 6:34 AM, email@hidden wrote:

I'm currently researching how to provide a custom NSCell to replace the current NSTextAttachentCell in an NSTextView.
The reason is that I want to have a different type of attachment not just for images or file objects, but for actual objects in my application.
IOW, something similar to NSTokens (actually I'm using an NSTokenFieldCell subclass) that can represent actual "objects" in a text field...


So, I have insertion working, and the cell fulfills the basic protocol for NSTextAttachment.
The problem is, when cutting and pasting my object back into the text field, it reverts to a standard NSTextAttachmentCell....
How can I override this to insert my special cell?
The problem I am running into is that the NSTextAttachment requires an NSFileWrapper, but since I am not representing a file object, I tested it out using:
NSTextAttachment *textAttachment = [[NSTextAttachment alloc] initWithFileWrapper:nil];
In the above case, paste then doesn't even work....

The issue here has to do with the formats used to store text on the pasteboard. Copy/paste can potentially take place between any two applications, so the pasteboard generally uses application-independent formats for the interchange of data. In this case, attachments are stored for pasteboard purposes as file contents. One option for you is to decide on a file format to represent the contents of your custom attachments, and use that as the contents of the file wrapper for copy/ paste purposes. In this, you should consider what you want to happen when text is copied and pasted from your application to another application--is there some suitable representation for your custom attachments that other applications would understand? Your application could then recognize these files by some means--by contents, or perhaps by extension--when they are pasted in, and substitute your custom attachment.


Douglas Davidson

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