Thanks for the info!
Disabling Show live issues indeed restores normal typing. Once Show live issues is enabled again, slow typing returns after a live issue is shown.
Disabling Show live issues, however, is also like going back to an ancient 15-year-old version when Xcode didn't have this feature. The loss of time and productivity would be enormous (for me, at least). That's why, in my view, it's better to just go to an earlier version that doesn't have this issue (Xcode 12 or Xcode 13 Beta 1, if you still have it).
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ha it looks like the 'Add a Comment' feature here removes all line breaks from text...
Nope not fixed in 13.1. The released version of Xcode 13 is still useless.
Do you mean that you have to work with one open tab only? Or you can open additional tabs again after closing them?
well I hope everybody on this thread has filed a bug report by now... would be strange if someone didn't?
>> I never quite figured out how to capture data for something like this. There’s no crash log. <<
Just submit a bug with exact, brief, and clear description of what happens. If they need additional info, they'll contact you with instructions. By now Apple hopefully received quite a few reports about this bug so they may just mark it as yet another duplicate (which is a good thing).
>> I just checked and the ticket I raised can't be found << You can't find it in submitted bugs in your Feedback Assistant app?
yeah the "background items added" notifications are annoying and there doesn't seem to be a way to disable them. it appears that Ventura shows them when a login item is added. i don't get a lot of them but even once a day is one too many. need to file a bug with request to add an option to disable them.
> Some people complain about because ObjC has square brackets and most other languages do not.
i believe that square brackets is one of the biggest advantages of Objective-C as you don't need to hold shift when typing them. i wish all languages used square brackets instead of the regular ones.
with some delay: Thanks for the additional info, Quinn! Fortunately, Apple made this knowledge optional and Xcode takes care of these provisional profiles under the hood automatically when needed. I guess something went wrong this time, which was fixed by deleting the aforementioned Provisioning Profiles folder. Your explanation clarifies what's going on under the hood.
This comment is added on Apple's request to test a forum notification bug.
This comment is added on Apple's request to test a forum notification bug.