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How to pass data from a TextField to a List (SwiftUI)
I have an app I'm working on where you make little digital ID cards with four pieces of data that I need to pass from a TextField to a List: Your Name (name) Your ID for Card (id) QR Code or Barcode? (qrcode Toggle) Card Name (cname) This is my CardsView: import SwiftUI struct Card: Identifiable {     let id = UUID()     let title: String } struct CardsView: View {     @State private var editMode = EditMode.inactive     @State private var cards: [Card] = []         private static var count = 0     var body: some View {         NavigationView {             List {                 ForEach(cards) { cards in                     NavigationLink(destination: CardFullView(cname: "Moore Lunch")) {                         CardRow(cname: "Lunch", name: "John Doe", id: "123456")                     }                 }                 .onDelete(perform: onDelete)                 .onMove(perform: onMove)             }                 .navigationTitle("Cards")                 .toolbar {                     ToolbarItem(placement: .navigationBarLeading) {                         EditButton()                     }                     ToolbarItem(placement: .navigationBarTrailing) {                         NavigationLink(                             destination: AddView(),                             label: {                                 Image(systemName: "plus")                             })                     }             }             .environment(\.editMode, $editMode)         }     }     private var addButton: some View {         switch editMode {         case .inactive:             return AnyView(Button(action: onAdd) { Image(systemName: "plus") })         default:             return AnyView(EmptyView())         }     }     func onAdd() {         cards.append(Card(title: "Card #\(Self.count)"))             Self.count += 1     }     private func onDelete(offsets: IndexSet) {         cards.remove(atOffsets: offsets)     }     private func onMove(source: IndexSet, destination: Int) {         cards.move(fromOffsets: source, toOffset: destination)     } } struct CardsView_Previews: PreviewProvider {     static var previews: some View {         CardsView()     } } ...and my AddView: import SwiftUI struct CardFullView: View {     let cname: String     var body: some View {         NavigationView {             CardView(name: "John Doe", id: "123456")                 .navigationTitle(cname)                 .navigationBarTitleDisplayMode(.inline)         }     } } struct CardFullView_Previews: PreviewProvider {     static var previews: some View {         CardFullView(cname: "Lunch")     } } CardRow shows an HStack, consisting of a generated QR Code or Barcode, a VStack with a title showing cname, a headline showing name, and a subheadline showing id. I want to pass the value of the TextFields into the CardRows.
21
0
3.3k
Dec ’20
I have a function in one view, but a button that should call it in another
This is an expansion of an earlier thread, How to pass data from a TextField to a List (SwiftUI) - https://developer.apple.com/forums/thread/669852, but I strayed away from the topic and was advised to start a new thread. To start, there are 2 views I need to work on; CardsView and AddView. CardsView: Here's the raw code: // //  CardsView.swift //  Lunch Card (iOS) // //  Created by Joshua Srery on 12/17/20. //  Additional code by OOPer on Apple Developer Forums // import SwiftUI struct Card: Identifiable {     let id = UUID()     let title: String } struct CardsView: View {     @StateObject var cardsInfo = CardsInfo()     @State var showSheetView = false     @State private var editMode = EditMode.inactive     @State private var cards: [Card] = []         private static var count = 0     var body: some View {         NavigationView {             List {                 ForEach(cards) { cards in                     NavigationLink(destination: CardFullView(cname: cardsInfo.newCard.cname, name: cardsInfo.newCard.name, id: cardsInfo.newCard.id)) {                         CardRow(cname: cardsInfo.newCard.cname, name: cardsInfo.newCard.name, id: cardsInfo.newCard.id)                     }                 }                 .onDelete(perform: onDelete)                 .onMove(perform: onMove)             }                 .navigationTitle("Cards")                 .toolbar {                     ToolbarItem(placement: .navigationBarLeading) {                         EditButton()                     }                     ToolbarItem(placement: .navigationBarTrailing) {                         Button(action: {                             self.showSheetView.toggle()                         }) {                             Image(systemName: "plus")                         }.sheet(isPresented: $showSheetView) {                             AddView(cardInfo: $cardsInfo.newCard)                     }                 }             }             .environment(\.editMode, $editMode)         }     }     private var addButton: some View {         switch editMode {         case .inactive:             return AnyView(Button(action: onAdd) { Image(systemName: "plus") })         default:             return AnyView(EmptyView())         }     }              func onAdd() {         withAnimation {             cards.append(Card(title: "Card #\(Self.count)"))                 Self.count += 1         }     }        private func onDelete(offsets: IndexSet) {         cards.remove(atOffsets: offsets)     }          private func onMove(source: IndexSet, destination: Int) {         cards.move(fromOffsets: source, toOffset: destination)     } } As you can see, there is a List being used to show the Cards you have made. Obviously, we start with none. The identifiable Card is being used, along with a declaration of cardsInfo, which is calling CardsInfo, an ObservableObject class. AddView: Here's the raw code: // //  AddView.swift //  Lunch Card (iOS) // //  Created by Joshua Srery on 12/18/20. // import SwiftUI struct AddView: View {     @Binding var cardInfo: CardInfo     var body: some View {         NavigationView {             VStack {                 CardView(name: cardInfo.name, id: cardInfo.id)                 TextField("Name", text: $cardInfo.name)                     .textFieldStyle(RoundedBorderTextFieldStyle())                     .shadow(radius: 10)                 TextField("ID", text: $cardInfo.id)                     .textFieldStyle(RoundedBorderTextFieldStyle())                     .shadow(radius: 10)                 TextField("Card Name", text: $cardInfo.cname)                     .textFieldStyle(RoundedBorderTextFieldStyle())                     .shadow(radius: 10)                 Button(action: {}) {                     Text("Create")                         .bold()                 }                 .disabled(self.cardInfo.name.isEmpty		self.cardInfo.id.isEmpty		self.cardInfo.cname.isEmpty)                 .foregroundColor(.white)                 .padding()                 .padding(.horizontal, 100)                 .background(Color.accentColor)                 .cornerRadius(10)             }.padding()             .navigationTitle(cardInfo.cname)             .navigationBarTitleDisplayMode(.inline)    	   }     } } This view contains a @Binding calling on CardInfo, which is with the CardsInfo class in CardInfo.swift: // //  CardsInfo.swift //  Lunch Card (iOS) // //  Created by Joshua Srery on 12/21/20. //  Code provided by OOPer on Apple Developer Forums // import Foundation struct CardInfo {     var name: String = ""     var id: String = ""     var cname: String = "" } class CardsInfo: ObservableObject {     @Published var newCard: CardInfo = CardInfo() } By the way, cname means Card Name. AddView contains three TextFields and a Button. The TextFields are for the user's name, card ID, and card name respectively. The button says Create, and has no action at the moment. The onAdd function in CardsView adds the information from the filled out cardsInfo to the List. I need the Create button in AddView to accomplish the same thing, but still adding it to CardView's list.
7
0
2.7k
Dec ’20
Force color scheme at the press of a button
This is once again about that Lunch Card app. There's a section in my app's settings that controls the appearance - color scheme, if you will - of the whole app. The three options are System Default Light Dark The picker is set up, and it works as normal, but what would I specify the action of these buttons to be to force a certain color scheme, whether that be dark, light, or auto. Here's the code for where the picker is: struct SettingsView: View {     @State private var selectedAppearance = 1     var body: some View { // ... Picker(selection: $selectedAppearance, label: Text("Appearance")) { Button(action: { // Change app color scheme to be auto }) { Text("System Default") }.tag(1) Button(action: { // Change app color scheme to be light }) { Text("Light") }.tag(2) Button(action: { // Change app color scheme to be dark }) { Text("Dark") }.tag(3) } // ... }
9
0
5.7k
Jan ’21
Variable overriding itself when adding to a list
This is yet another expansion of my TextField and function questions. The code for my Lunch Card app is pretty much set in stone, except for a little bug with a variable. This bug happens when you create a new card. Here's the code for both CardsView and AddView. CardView: // //  CardsView.swift //  Lunch Card (iOS) // //  Created by Joshua Srery on 12/17/20. //  Additional code by OOPer on Apple Developer Forums // import SwiftUI struct Card: Identifiable {     let id = UUID()     let title: String } struct CardsView: View {     @StateObject var cardsInfo = CardsInfo()     @StateObject var sheetInfo = SheetInfo()     @State private var editMode = EditMode.inactive          var body: some View {         NavigationView {             List {                 ForEach(cardsInfo.cards) { cards in                     NavigationLink(destination: CardFullView(cname: cardsInfo.newCard.cname, name: cardsInfo.newCard.name, id: cardsInfo.newCard.id)) {                         CardRow(cname: cardsInfo.newCard.cname, name: cardsInfo.newCard.name, id: cardsInfo.newCard.id)                     }                 }                 .onDelete(perform: onDelete)                 .onMove(perform: onMove)             }.listStyle(PlainListStyle())             .navigationTitle("Cards")             .toolbar {                 ToolbarItem(placement: .navigationBarLeading) {                     EditButton()                 }                 ToolbarItem(placement: .navigationBarTrailing) {                     Button(action: {                         self.sheetInfo.showSheetView.toggle()                     }) {                         Image(systemName: "plus")                     }                 }             }             .environment(\.editMode, $editMode)             .sheet(isPresented: $sheetInfo.showSheetView) {                 AddView(cardsInfo: cardsInfo, sheetInfo: sheetInfo)             }         }     }          private func onDelete(offsets: IndexSet) {         cardsInfo.cards.remove(atOffsets: offsets)     }     private func onMove(source: IndexSet, destination: Int) {         cardsInfo.cards.move(fromOffsets: source, toOffset: destination)     } } AddView: // //  AddView.swift //  Lunch Card (iOS) // //  Created by Joshua Srery on 12/18/20. // Additional code by OOPer on Apple Developer Forums // import SwiftUI struct AddView: View {     @ObservedObject var cardsInfo: CardsInfo     @ObservedObject var sheetInfo: SheetInfo     var body: some View {         NavigationView {             VStack {                 CardView(name: cardsInfo.newCard.name, id: cardsInfo.newCard.id)                 TextField("Name", text: $cardsInfo.newCard.name)                     .textFieldStyle(RoundedBorderTextFieldStyle())                     .shadow(radius: 10)                 TextField("ID", text: $cardsInfo.newCard.id)                     .textFieldStyle(RoundedBorderTextFieldStyle())                     .keyboardType(.numberPad)                     .shadow(radius: 10)                 TextField("Card Name", text: $cardsInfo.newCard.cname)                     .textFieldStyle(RoundedBorderTextFieldStyle())                     .shadow(radius: 10)                 Button(action: {                     cardsInfo.add()                     sheetInfo.showSheetView = false                 }) {                     Text("Create")                         .bold()                 }                 .disabled(self.cardsInfo.newCard.name.isEmpty		self.cardsInfo.newCard.id.isEmpty		self.cardsInfo.newCard.cname.isEmpty)                 .foregroundColor(.white)                 .padding()                 .padding(.horizontal, 100)                 .background(Color.accentColor)                 .cornerRadius(10)             }.padding()             .navigationTitle(cardsInfo.newCard.cname)             .navigationBarTitleDisplayMode(.inline)         }     } } AddView shows as a sheet. When looking, you can see that cardsInfo.newCard is being used to signify - if not obvious - a new card. But, the bug here is that when you add multiple cards, the previous cards are being overridden. A solution I'm thinking of is adding the already-added cards into some kind of database or text file, but (1) I have literally no idea how I would approach that, and (2) that would probably mean rewriting about 3/4 of the existing code, which is a path that I am trying to avoid.
2
0
694
Jan ’21
Save List data to device (another expansion)
Lunch Card is almost finished, though there's one major part that will need to be addressed for it to go out of development. As from last threads, I've implemented the Cards system, made it so you can change colors, include multiple cards, and the cards stay...until you quit the app. Restarting the app (dismissing it in App Switcher and opening it back up) doesn't save all your cards. That would be a major inconvenience, as it'd be more like an App Clip than an actual App. I've considered Core Data, writing to a text file, etc., but (1) I can't decide which one would be more convenient and (2) I don't know how I would implement it (ex. CoreData would be hard to implement especially after almost finishing it without). Please tell me if I need to provide more code than I have in previous threads. Here they are from most recent to earliest: Force color scheme at the press of a button - https://developer.apple.com/forums/thread/670593 Variable overriding itself when adding to a list - https://developer.apple.com/forums/thread/670617 I have a function in one view, but a button that should call it in another - https://developer.apple.com/forums/thread/670536 How to pass data from a TextField to a List (SwiftUI) - https://developer.apple.com/forums/thread/669852 The original How to pass data... post code is pretty outdated, so I would refer to the more recent threads. Homestretch...! Note: CardsInfo.swift and SheetInfo.swift merged to make Info.swift: // //  Info.swift //  Lunch Card (iOS) // //  Created by Joshua Srery on 12/21/20. //  Additional code by OOPer on Apple Developer Forums // import Foundation struct CardInfo: Identifiable {     var name: String = ""     var id: String = ""     var cname: String = ""     var code: String = "" } class CardsInfo: ObservableObject {     @Published var newCard: CardInfo = CardInfo()     @Published var cards: [CardInfo] = []          func add() {         cards.append(newCard)     } } class SheetInfo: ObservableObject {     @Published var showSheetView = false }
9
0
787
Jan ’21
Convert a variable into JSON (Lunch Card expansion)
Another expansion of the Lunch Card app. I figured out my problem in the last thread so I started a new one. Please see my last thread for code references. To save List data without using Core Data — because that would be a bit of a hassle — I was told to use Codable to convert the array to Data and export that into a file. Thing is; I don’t know how I’d convert cardsInfo into Data, furthermore, convert to JSON. Once I figure out how to convert that to JSON and into writable data, I’ll pretty much be good to go.
10
0
1.4k
Jan ’21
Huge gap for navigation bar (Lunch Card expansion)
By the way, this is the last expansion before the app reaches its first finished build. Almost there! I've seen many forums about this problem, but they've never solved my problem. Especially with the new .navigationTitle modifier instead of the - what seems to be - deprecated .navigationBarTitle. This problem is evident in two views: CardFullView - which is just a detail view for the cards - and ColophonView - which is basically the Lunch Card version of Widgetsmith's colophon. There's a huge gap above the view. For CardFullView, it's an inline navigation bar. ColophonView doesn't have one - it has a custom title which is basically just a ZStack rectangle. Here's the full code for each view: CardFullView: Note: CardView has split into two views, CardViewV and CardViewH. These are for features I still need to develop. Please don't mind them. import SwiftUI struct CardFullView: View {     let cname: String     let name: String     let id: String //    let code: String          var body: some View {         NavigationView {             CardViewV(name: name, id: id)                          .navigationBarTitle(Text(cname), displayMode: .inline)         }     } } ColophonView: struct ColophonView: View {     @Environment(\.colorScheme) var colorScheme          var body: some View {         ScrollView {             VStack {                 ZStack {                     Rectangle()                         .frame(maxWidth: .infinity, maxHeight: 75)                         .foregroundColor(colorScheme == .light ? .white : .black)                         .overlay(LinearGradient(gradient: Gradient(colors: colorScheme == .light ? [Color.white, Color("Light")] : [Color.black, Color("Light")]), startPoint: .topLeading, endPoint: .bottomTrailing))                     HStack {                         Text("Colophon")                            .font(.system(.headline, design: .monospaced))                         Text("by Joshua Srery")                             .font(.system(.body, design: .monospaced))                             .foregroundColor(.secondary)                     }                 }                 .cornerRadius(25)                 .padding()                 ScrollView {                     Text("Lunch Card was built in Xcode 12.3+ on a 15 inch, 2019 Macbook Pro running macOS Big Sur.\n\nI'd like to thank the LPS school district for letting the idea spark.  Lunch Card wouldn't exist without the new precautions.\n\nI would also like to thank Apple Developer Forums user OOPer for providing most of the code to power the card system.  This app would still be in development (probably for more than a year) without their help.")                         .padding()                     .font(.system(.body, design: .monospaced))                 }             }.edgesIgnoringSafeArea(.all)         }     } } Remember, these views work as expected. The only issue is the hierarchy that is adding to that gap. Please look at previous threads for other code samples.
3
0
3.1k
Jan ’21
Parse XML in SwiftUI
This is about a different app now. I'm developing a companion app for an online magazine called The Hair Society (thehairsociety.org). Thing is, I need to retrieve the existing articles for the app to actually make sense. I've tried many different solutions (NewsAPI, SwiftyJSON, Kanna, etc.) but none of which have worked - which is probably due to my lack of sense of where to put things. Here's some code: ArticlesView + ArticleRow: // //  ArticlesView.swift //  Hair Society Go // //  Created by Joshua Srery on 11/29/20. // import SwiftUI struct ArticlesView: View {     var body: some View {         NavigationView {             List {                 ForEach(0 ..< 5) { item in                     NavigationLink(destination: ArticleView(title: "Replace with Title var", image: "Replace with Img var", content: "Replace with Content var", author: "Replace with Author var", date: "Replace with Date var")) {                         ArticleRow(image: "Replace with Img var", title: "Replace with Title var", author: "Replace with Author var", date: "Replace with Date var")                     }                 }             }             .navigationTitle("Articles")             .toolbar(content: {                 Menu {                     Button("Date", action: {})                     Button("Title", action: {})                     Button("Customize…", action: {})                 } label: {                     Label("Filter", systemImage: "line.horizontal.3.decrease.circle")                 }             })         }     } } struct ArticleRow: View {     let image: String     let title: String     let author: String     let date: String        var body: some View {         HStack {             Image(image)                 .resizable()                 .frame(minWidth: 75, maxWidth: 100, maxHeight: 75)                 .cornerRadius(12)             VStack(alignment: .leading, content: {                 Text(title)                     .font(.headline)                 Text("\(author) • \(date)")                     .font(.subheadline)             })         }     } } That filter option will probably show in a later thread. ArticleView: // //  ArticleView.swift //  Hair Society Go // //  Created by Joshua Srery on 12/16/20. // import SwiftUI struct ArticleView: View {     let title: String     let image: String     let content: String     let author: String     let date: String          var body: some View {         ScrollView {             GeometryReader { geometry in                 ZStack {                     if geometry.frame(in: .global).minY <= 0 {                         Image(image)                             .resizable()                             .aspectRatio(contentMode: .fill)                             .frame(width: geometry.size.width, height: geometry.size.height)                             .offset(y: geometry.frame(in: .global).minY/9)                             .clipped()                     } else {                         Image(image)                                 .resizable()                                 .aspectRatio(contentMode: .fill)                                 .frame(width: geometry.size.width, height: geometry.size.height + geometry.frame(in: .global).minY)                                 .clipped()                                 .offset(y: -geometry.frame(in: .global).minY)                     }                 }             }                 .frame(height: 400)             VStack(alignment: .leading) {                 Text(title)                     .font(.largeTitle)                     .bold()                     .lineLimit(nil)                     .padding(.top, 10)                 Text("\(author) • \(date)")                     .foregroundColor(.gray)                     .padding(.top, 10)                 AdvertisementView(ad: "Replace with Ad var")                     .padding(.top)                     .frame(width: 350)                 Text(content)                     .lineLimit(nil)                     .padding(.top, 15)             }                 .frame(minWidth: 350)             .padding(.horizontal, 15)         }             .edgesIgnoringSafeArea(.top)     } } struct AdvertisementView: View {     let ad: String          var body: some View {         VStack {             Text("Advertisement")                 .font(Font.system(.body).smallCaps())                 .foregroundColor(.secondary)                 .bold()                 .tracking(1.0)             Image(ad)                 .resizable()                 .frame(height: 37.5)             Text("Advertisement")                 .font(Font.system(.body).smallCaps())                 .foregroundColor(.secondary)                 .bold()                 .tracking(1.0)         }.padding(.vertical, 3)         .background(Color.white)         .cornerRadius(25)         .shadow(radius: 10)     } }
11
0
5.1k
Jan ’21
(Expansion) Call a Class into views
Please read the last thread: Parse XML in SwiftUI - https://developer.apple.com/forums/thread/670984 I've got the code to parse articles from XML courtesy of OOPer...but I need to actually execute it in ArticlesView. How would I call ArticlesParser into ArticlesView and related views and run the parser onto an XML file (THS.xml)? Here's ArticleInfo.swift and ArticlesView. ArticleInfo.swift: // //  ArticleInfo.swift //  Hair Society Go // //  Created by Joshua Srery on 1/13/21. //  Code provided by OOPer on Apple Developer Forums // import Foundation struct Article {     var title: String = ""     var date: Date?     var author: String?     var img: URL?     /// content in HTML     var content: String = "" } class ArticlesParser: XMLParser {     // Public property to hold the result     var articles: [Article] = []          var dateTimeZone = TimeZone(abbreviation: "GMT-6")     lazy var dateFormater: DateFormatter = {         let df = DateFormatter()         //Please set up this DateFormatter for the entry `date`         df.locale = Locale(identifier: "en_US_POSIX")         df.dateFormat = "MMM dd, yyyy"         df.timeZone = dateTimeZone         return df     }()          private var textBuffer: String = ""     private var nextArticle: Article? = nil     override init(data: Data) {         super.init(data: data)         self.delegate = self     } } extension ArticlesParser: XMLParserDelegate {          // Called when opening tag (`<elementName>`) is found     func parser(_ parser: XMLParser, didStartElement elementName: String, namespaceURI: String?, qualifiedName qName: String?, attributes attributeDict: [String : String] = [:]) {         switch elementName {         case "posts":             nextArticle = Article()         case "title":             textBuffer = ""         case "date":             textBuffer = ""         case "author":             textBuffer = ""         case "img":             textBuffer = ""         case "content":             textBuffer = ""         default:             print("Ignoring \(elementName)")             break         }     }          // Called when closing tag (`</elementName>`) is found     func parser(_ parser: XMLParser, didEndElement elementName: String, namespaceURI: String?, qualifiedName qName: String?) {         switch elementName {         case "posts":             if let article = nextArticle {                 articles.append(article)             }         case "title":             nextArticle?.title = textBuffer         case "date":             print("date: \(textBuffer)")             nextArticle?.date = dateFormater.date(from: textBuffer)         case "author":             nextArticle?.author = textBuffer         case "img":             print("img: \(textBuffer)")             nextArticle?.img = URL(string: textBuffer)         case "content":             nextArticle?.content = textBuffer         default:             print("Ignoring \(elementName)")             break         }     }          // Called when a character sequence is found     // This may be called multiple times in a single element     func parser(_ parser: XMLParser, foundCharacters string: String) {         textBuffer += string     }          // Called when a CDATA block is found     func parser(_ parser: XMLParser, foundCDATA CDATABlock: Data) {         guard let string = String(data: CDATABlock, encoding: .utf8) else {             print("CDATA contains non-textual data, ignored")             return         }         textBuffer += string     }          // For debugging     func parser(_ parser: XMLParser, parseErrorOccurred parseError: Error) {         print(parseError)         print("on:", parser.lineNumber, "at:", parser.columnNumber)     } } ArticlesView: // //  ArticlesView.swift //  Hair Society Go // //  Created by Joshua Srery on 11/29/20. // import SwiftUI struct ArticlesView: View {     var body: some View {         NavigationView {             List {                 ForEach(0 ..< 5) { item in                     NavigationLink(destination: ArticleView(title: "Replace with Title var", image: "Replace with Img var", content: "Replace with Content var", author: "Replace with Author var", date: "Replace with Date var")) {                         ArticleRow(image: "Replace with Img var", title: "Replace with Title var", author: "Replace with Author var", date: "Replace with Date var")                     }                 }             }             .navigationTitle("Articles")             .toolbar(content: {                 Menu {                     Button("Date", action: {})                     Button("Title", action: {})                     Button("Customize…", action: {})                 } label: {                     Label("Filter", systemImage: "line.horizontal.3.decrease.circle")                 }             }) // Ignore the filter Menu for right now         }     } } struct ArticleRow: View {     let image: String     let title: String     let author: String     let date: String          var body: some View {         HStack {             Image(image)                 .resizable()                 .frame(minWidth: 75, maxWidth: 100, maxHeight: 75)                 .cornerRadius(12)             VStack(alignment: .leading, content: {                 Text(title)                     .font(.headline)                 Text("\(author) • \(date)")                     .font(.subheadline)             })         }     } }
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991
Jan ’21
Misclicked on new version of app...can't delete
Lunch Card - https://apps.apple.com/us/app/lunch-card-id-card-manager/id1546901593 is finally out. But while in App Store Connect, I misclicked while trying to create a macOS version of the app and clicked tvOS. Now, I can't delete it. It gives me the option, but gives me an error. It literally just says: An error has occurred. Try again later. After trying to Google this problem, it didn't come to any avail. Now I'm stuck with a tvOS version of my app that I have no plans to develop (because who needs to scan an ID card on a TV?).
5
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1.2k
Jan ’21
App Clip Application Identifier not matching...?
While I ponder my problem with the tvOS version of Lunch Card, I have another one on my hands. I'm creating an app clip version of Lunch Card, and it works perfectly. But, when archiving this build, it gives me this error: The com.apple.developer.parent-application-identifiers entitlement [...] of an App Clip must match the application-identifier entitlement [...] of its containing parent app. I've recreated the app clip target, and looked at the entitlements, but I don't see anything wrong. The error, of course, gives me the two different identifiers, but I don't know how I would revert that.
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994
Jan ’21
(Lunch Card Expansion) Make the "newCard" variable empty after adding card
I just noticed something in the Lunch Card app: when adding another card after adding the first, it autofills all the text fields (newCard variable) with the previous info. For a normal customer, I think that would be pretty annoying to have to delete all the field data and replace it every time. If you need reference, check out previous expansions of this. Here's the most recent code for CardsView and AddView for version 1.2: CardsView - https://developer.apple.com/forums/content/attachment/dcdbf40d-93ee-46fe-851b-54cf36e4498fNote: Not really important, but instructions now exist. AddView - https://developer.apple.com/forums/content/attachment/eb2260d0-6848-4cca-b94c-e488963b0139Note: I added colors as a variable as well. Here's Info.swift. It's not too much different but there are now colors: Info.swift - https://developer.apple.com/forums/content/attachment/83be0d99-62db-4242-a20b-72f66e78bb02
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1.1k
Jan ’21
(Expansion) Sheet isn't complying to color scheme
So...I lost most of the Lunch Card files to a factory reset. There was an issue with Disk Utility - it's a whole thing. But I've managed to recover most of the files. But there's something that isn't working anymore within the code. In SettingsView, where the color scheme ("Appearance") picker is located, you choose between light, dark, and system default. But when calling the sheet for AddView in CardsView (using SheetInfo() from Info.swift), it just defaults to whatever the system is set at. When I previewed it, it was light mode when the app setting was dark. Thing is, before I lost all my files, it worked perfectly normal, and consumer versions reflected that. I recovered (and rewrote some of) SettingsView and AddView (thank goodness I showed the full code for AddView here). I may have missed something, so here's my code for both, plus ContentView, CardsView, and Info.swift. SettingsView.swift - https://developer.apple.com/forums/content/attachment/91ff1182-42d3-48b8-9f8d-be765ee32c43AddView - https://developer.apple.com/forums/content/attachment/06f1b340-4770-49f4-b530-6f27c1b50490CardsView - https://developer.apple.com/forums/content/attachment/4291deb9-ce02-4769-8ccf-d02d9d6908b8ContentView - https://developer.apple.com/forums/content/attachment/12cc3378-8769-4cee-8faa-63af72cc7ab3Info.swift - https://developer.apple.com/forums/content/attachment/89c6710c-faed-4b93-8152-a0f9a95806c8
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593
Feb ’21