On Jan 17, 2010, at 8:27 AM, Joachim Deelen wrote:
Hi Keary,
thanks for the reply.
Yes, Target-Dependancy is correct.
Chris Espinosa states, that two different Versions of Xcode may be installed, since opening the project by double clicking on the xcodeproj-file works around the problem. I definitely have only one copy of Xcode installed.
Hey Joachim -
I'm glad you found a workaround, but that workaround doesn't necessary show that you only have one set of tools. When you get Xcode and IB both running, but not communicating, try command+clicking on the dock icons for the running Xcode and IB and make sure that the finder windows that pop up both reference the same folder. You might have "Developer (Previous Install)/Applciations" and "Developer/Applications".
Jon Hess
It's Version 3.2.1
Component versions
Xcode IDE: 1613.0
Xcode Core: 1614.0
ToolSupport: 1591.0
These Version Numbers stay the same, no matter if I start Xcode directly from /Developer/Applications, from the Reference in the Dock or by double clicking on a project-file.
For now I can live with the workaround. I'm working on the project on different computers. On my MacBook Pro, there is no Problem at all. But is has a newer OS X version than 10.6.2...
-
Joachim
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