Re: Close/Minimize the app
Re: Close/Minimize the app
- Subject: Re: Close/Minimize the app
- From: Symadept <email@hidden>
- Date: Thu, 12 Nov 2009 16:35:44 +0800
Hi,
I have fixed my problem of miniaturizing the window. It was quite cool.
NSApplication *application = [NSApplication sharedApplication];
NSWindow *keyWindow = [application keyWindow];
[keyWindow miniaturize:keyWindow];
My app has KeyWindow but not MainWindow, because my app's window is
NSBorderlessWindowMask.
Thanks alot all of you for great effort.
Regards
Mustafa
On Thu, Nov 12, 2009 at 1:23 PM, kirankumar <email@hidden>wrote:
> hi,
>
>
> this will help you
> keep this 3lines of code in awakeFromNib, and mpwindow is you are window
> name.
>
>
> id closeButton = [mpWindow standardWindowButton:NSWindowCloseButton ];
> [closeButton setAction:@selector(closeapp:)];
> [closeButton setTarget:self];
>
>
>
> - (IBAction)closeapp:(id)sender
> {
> exit(0);
> }
>
> Regards,
> kiran
> On Nov 12, 2009, at 10:18 AM, Symadept wrote:
>
> Actually I wanted to hide the app when close button is closed such that
> it
> shall be active still. Which I was doing. I was basically facing the
> problem
> with Minimize the app. I don't know why the NSApp
> miniaturizeAll:self<http://discussions.apple.com/>;
> is not functioning as expected.
>
> Regards
> Symadept
>
>
> On Thu, Nov 12, 2009 at 12:27 PM, Nick Zitzmann <email@hidden>
> wrote:
>
>
> On Nov 11, 2009, at 8:50 PM, Symadept wrote:
>
> How to close/minimize the app programmatically.
>
>
> To close the app, call -[NSApplication terminate:].
>
> I tried the following way
> but no luck.
>
> [[NSApp mainWindow] performMiniaturize:nil];
>
>
> This will only miniaturize the main window, and it won't work if
> -mainWindow returns nil (e.g. the app is in the background).
>
> [OR]
> [NSApp miniaturizeAll:self];
>
>
> Now that should minimize all of the windows, unless you somehow
> circumvented loading NSApplication.
>
> And close should not terminate my app, it should place an icon in the
>
> Dock,
>
> I hope it would be the same. And I know to give Dock Menu items.
>
> From that menuitem, if I click on Open, it shall be able to launch my
>
> app.
>
> If an app is in the Dock, it is there because the app is running, or
> because the user wants to keep it in the Dock when it is not running.
> Please
> do not programmatically add inactive applications to the Dock. Even if
> there
> was an official way of doing this, Mac OS X has a long tradition of making
> this choice opt-in instead of opt-out like on Windows.
>
> Nick Zitzmann
> <http://www.chronosnet.com/>
>
>
>
>
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