[Moderator] List Guidelines
[Moderator] List Guidelines
- Subject: [Moderator] List Guidelines
- From: Scott Anguish <email@hidden>
- Date: Thu, 25 Feb 2010 23:58:50 -0500
New Posters
===========
A reminder that people who post for the first time are moderated. Messages should be approved or rejected within 24 hours. Once it’s clear that the posts are on topic and not violating the rules, the moderation is cleared.
If your messages are automatically rejected the odds are that you’re posting from an email address that you are not subscribed with.
iPhone SDK
==========
Developers should be aware that any iPhone SDK greater than 3.1 is under non-disclosure (section 5.3 of the iPhone Development Agreement). It can't be discussed here. This includes other mailing lists, forums, services like Twitter, and blogs. Violating the NDA will result in WWDR being notified of the breach. Further action is at their (and legal's) discretion.
The Apple Developer Forums at http://devforums.apple.com are available for discussion of NDA software under certain situations. Please consult the forums for more information.
iPad
====
We’re all excited about the iPad but discussion about it here isn’t appropriate.
Copy Protection
===============
The discussion of copy protection is not appropriate for this list. Instead try the Mac Small Business list noted below.
Discussing Private API
======================
The discussion of Private API is also not appropriate for this list. Using private API is strongly discouraged as it can (and often does) change in future software revisions. If you feel some private API should be made public contact WWDR directly or file a bug using bugreporter.apple.com. Please do not advocate for those changes here, it isn't effective.
Please stay on-topic
====================
There are currently more than 8000 subscribers to this list and several hundred messages posted per day. In order to keep the list useful please stay on topic and stick to technical discussion.
Cocoa-dev should not be the first place you turn when you encounter a problem. First you should:
- Search the documentation in Xcode
- Remember to select the appropriate doc set and, if applicable, turn on full text searching
- Search the list archives at apple.com or cocoabuilder.com
- Many questions have been asked repeatedly and good answers have already been provided. Check the archives _every time_.
- Search Google
- There are many Cocoa developers who blog about their experiences. This is a very useful resource.
- Ensure that this is actually Cocoa related.
- Basic C questions are not appropriate for this list.
If someone posts a message that is off-topic, please do not reply to the list. You should contact the sender directly or alert a moderator. If a moderator flags a thread (typically with [Moderator] in the subject line), do not continue to post to that thread. Do feel free to contact the list admins at email@hidden with any issues.
If you post a message that is blatantly off-topic, you are liable to be moderated.
While Apple engineers often subscribe to the list and answer questions, they do so on a volunteer basis. This is not an official support channel, and you should not expect an Apple engineer to provide the answer. Instead contact <email@hidden> for technical issues.
To file bugs use bugreporter at http://bugreporter.apple.com
Other mailing lists
===================
**** Other Apple mailing lists that may be relevant are listed at:
<http://lists.apple.com/mailman/listinfo>
in particular see:
Xcode-users: <http://lists.apple.com/mailman/listinfo/xcode-users>
The Omni Group hosts a general Mac OS X developer list:
<http://www.omnigroup.com/mailman/listinfo/macosx-dev>
There is a Yahoo Group for discussion of business-related issues at:
<http://groups.yahoo.com/group/macsb/>
List etiquette
==============
When you post a message, bear in mind that you are asking several thousand people to listen to what you're saying. Please ensure that you abide by the list rules:
<http://lists.apple.com/tc.html>
<http://lists.apple.com/tips.html>
In particular: please "Edit included messages in replies to
minimize the amount of text." There is no need, for example,
to include the list footer in your reply.
**** Before posting a question, please check the list archives (see "Online resources" below) and try searching Google. Many questions have been asked before and have already been answered.
**** When you ask a question, whenever possible please:
1. Describe what your high-level goal is
2. Include any relevant code
3. If appropriate, include URLs to screenshots
For more details, see:
<http://www.mikeash.com/getting_answers.html>
If you post a message to the list and do not get a reply, you should not simply repost the message.
There may be reasons why no-one has answered, see the references above.
If you want to send again, add more information or background, or explain what further steps
you have taken in the interim to solve your problem.
Note that you should never post to the list any message that was sent to you
privately unless you have the original author's permission.
Cocoa-related resources
=======================
Cocoa-related resources that may answer your question without the need to wait for a reply from the list:
Apple's documentation
---------------------
The Cocoa Getting Started page.
If you haven't read any Cocoa documentation and want to learn about
the technology, you should begin with this.
<http://developer.apple.com/referencelibrary/GettingStarted/GS_Cocoa/>
Main documentation links:
<http://developer.apple.com/documentation/>
<http://developer.apple.com/documentation/Cocoa/Cocoa.html>
Apple produces several kinds of documentation. For an overview of how to use the documentation, see:
<http://developer.apple.com/referencelibrary/usingreflib.html>
and
<http://developer.apple.com/macosx/newinreflibrary.html>
* Finding documentation
If you are not sure where to find documentation relevant to your problem, a useful strategy is to go to the API reference for a relevant class and look at its companion document. You can also search the online documentation suite using the search field at the top right of the page (see, for example, <http://developer.apple.com/documentation/Cocoa/index.html>). It is often a good idea to check the "Restrict to Cocoa" box. If you need more precise search, you can use the Advanced Search panel at <http://developer.apple.com/search/>.
Remember you can also view and search the documentation in Xcode -- see the "Help" menu. You can see all the methods associated with a class (and links to relevant documentation) using Xcode's Class Browser (see the Project > Class Browser menu item). In Xcode, you can Option-double-click on a symbol to look it up in the documentation, and you can Command-double-click on a symbol to go to the header file in which it is declared.
* Keeping documentation up-to-date
You can keep your local documentation up-to-date by using the Documentation update preference in Xcode. Apple's developer documentation is updated en bloc about once a month. An update package is made available at about the same time that updates are published on the web site.
Code examples
-------------
Apple provides code samples in two places, on-disk (installed with the developer tools) and online:
Developer examples
<file:///Developer/Examples/AppKit/>
ADC
<http://developer.apple.com/samplecode/>
Online resources
----------------
List archives
<http://lists.apple.com/archives/cocoa-dev>
Combined Apple and Omni Cocoa developer list archives
<http://www.cocoabuilder.com/>
Cocoa-related sites
<http://www.cocoadev.com/>
<http://www.cocoadevcentral.com/>
<http://www.stepwise.com/>
Cocoa Bindings
<http://developer.apple.com/documentation/Cocoa/Conceptual/CocoaBindings/>
<http://developer.apple.com/documentation/Cocoa/Reference/CocoaBindingsRef/>
<http://developer.apple.com/cocoa/cocoabindings.html>
Google
<http://www.google.com/>
(It is sometimes the case that using the subject line of a post as a search term in
Google will yield an answer. If this is the case, you have probably not invested sufficient
effort into finding an answer to your problem, and you are likely to receive a reprimand.)
Memory management
-----------------
Developers are strongly discouraged from attempting to reformulate Cocoa's memory management rules in posts to the list. Almost invariably, someone makes a subtle or not-so-subtle mistake which then results in confusion and additional messages to resolve the issue. Simply post links to the relevant documentation, such as:
<http://developer.apple.com/documentation/Cocoa/Conceptual/MemoryMgmt/Tasks/MemoryManagementRules.html>
Links to other reviewed articles that discuss memory management are given in <http://www.alastairs-place.net/cocoa/faq.txt>
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