I'm in the midst of moving all of my images into asset catalogs, adding size classes, and applying tags.I have two kudos's to share for any Apple engineers who might be reading: it's been really useful to work with multiple selected assets, thank you for allowing multiple selection; and, it's been really useful to drag a set of images into an asset catalog and have them associated with each other based on file name (e.g., .png, @2x.png, @2x~iPad.png).I started with single monolithic asset catalog, but then I realized that I will need multiple asset catalogs in order to separate out some images between Xcode targets (different apps), but not before I already started adding and configuring a ton of assets that now need to be separated out. So, I have two workflow questions:Is it possible to break out a set of assets, that are already in an asset catalog folder and configured with size classes and tags, into their own asset catalog file? If so, how? I tried dragging them out but that doesn't work.Is it possible to "name" image files appropriately for size classes, so that when I drag a set of images, they are associated with each other by size class? If so, what is the naming convention? I know this works for ~iPad, but I'm transitioning away from specifying iPad to specifying size regular.Thanks in advance for any tips on these.
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Back in the Swift 4 days, I implemented a RandomNumberGenerator for the purpose of testing, which is to say, it always returns the same sequence of UInt64's, so that I can validate code that accepts a RandomNumberGenerator. However, as of "circa" Swift 5, this test is reliably failing, because even though it returns a different number in the next function, it fails to return any element except the first one from arrays (sequences, etc.).
Sample code is here:
class MockRandomNumberGenerator: RandomNumberGenerator {
var current: UInt64 = 0
func next() -> UInt64 {
defer { current += 1 }
return current
}
}
var mockRandomNumberGenerator = MockRandomNumberGenerator()
let testArray = 0..<10
for _ in 0..<testArray.count {
print("testArray.randomElement : \(testArray.randomElement(using: &mockRandomNumberGenerator)!)")
print("testArray[Int.random(...)]: \(testArray[Int.random(in: 0..<testArray.count, using: &mockRandomNumberGenerator)])")
}
The output of this is always 0, for every iteration. I expected the sequence to be returned in order, from 0 to 9. So, it fails in the same way for both array randomElement() and range random(in:). Prior to Swift 5, this same implementation returned the sequence in order.
What do I need to do in the random number generator implementation to get it to work with arrays (and ranges) correctly?
Hi,I have a confounding localization problem for the menu bar and preferences in an iPad-on-macOS (Catalyst) app.Here is all I did to find the problem. I checked the Mac checkbox for an existing, shipping app that contains 10 localizations, and I added the default menu bar to its Main.storyboard file. The Main.storyboard file is not localized, as I replace all app-specific strings at runtime by calling NSLocalizedString directly. I also have a Settings bundle localized to the same 10 languages.The first problem I observed was, the menu bar items that refer to the app name (such as About, Quit, etc.), appear in ALL-CAPS (e.g., NSMENUITEMTITLEABOUT, etc.):The menu bar menu title for the app is correct, but it appears to not substitute the app name in any menu items that require it. The rest of the application (main window contents) localizes as expected.If I select a different region and language to run, all of the CamelCase menu items (Preferences, Services, etc.) appear localized, but the all-caps items are still not localized.I tried changing the storyboard file to have localization (Base, and all of the app's supported locales), but it had no effect. I also observed that if I add my own menu items using the same string keys found in my Localization.strings files, and ensure that the storyboard is using those localization files, my app-specific menu items are also not being localized. Only the system menu items without the app name are being localized.Lastly, I observed that the Preferences window's strings are also entirely in ALL-CAPS. If I copy each of the localizable strings from the Settings' Root.strings files into the respective Localizable.strings files, the Preferences window strings still don't get localized.If anyone familiar with the subtleties of localization and Catalyst can offer suggestions for me to diagnose or fix these problems, let me know what to try next.Regards, Brian
I am having a bizarre problem relating to having an application and a framework (it's what we need to do for Watch or Today, or etc, right?), and a Swift view class I moved from the application to the framework. Because, Watch or Today, or etc..What's bizarre is, I literally moved the class from the app to the framework, I didn't modify the source code outside of adding a handful of "public" in front of the class name and related methods so that compilation would chill out. It was compiling and rendering cleanly for the application in the simulator, which has a main storyboard and a separate storyboard using the new storyboard reference feature. All targets except the legacy target (the application I am replacing) are iOS 9. I should mention that the class happens to have the same class name of a class in a legacy target that is Objective-C based, but neither the new target nor the framework are Objective-C based, both are pure Swift (yay, me!), and there is no relation to the legacy target.OK. So the problem. The main.storyboard happily soaks up the moved class, and renders it OK after the move. But when the storyboard reference loads a view controller containing the exact same class name, with the same Module name (the framework), it first logs "Unknown class <yadda-yadda-deleted> in Interface Builder file." and then promptly crashes (SEGV) attempting to accessing anything in the missing class.This is a fairly infuriating prolem. I don't know how to move forward. I saw on stackoverflow that there was a similar problem in Xcode 6 where if the Module name wasn't set, it might crash in a way like this. Only, both in the Main storyboard and the stoaryboard reference, the Module name is set. What gives?I'm not particularly inclined to figure out how to report this in standalone code to bugreporter, I'm much more keen to get advice, if anyone else has run into a similar problem and successfully worked around it.
I have XCUITest automation whose main purpose, beside testing, is to make clean, localized screenshots for use in the App Store. The storyboard view controllers contain UITextViews that do not dismiss on typing/tapping the return key. For the sake of argument, assume I am targeting iPad only--I have a solution for iPhone, because that needed another way to dismiss the keyboard anyway. I am having difficulty finding an XCUITest keyboard-dismissing solution that works across all devices, independently of Simulator settings and the test's locale settings.Nominally, the following appears to work for Englishif XCUIApplication().keyboards.buttons["Hide keyboard"].exists {
XCUIApplication().keyboards.buttons["Hide keyboard"].tap()
}
if XCUIApplication().keyboards.buttons["Dismiss"].exists {
XCUIApplication().keyboards.buttons["Dismiss"].tap()
}However, if I specify another language, such as French, and region, such as France, in the Scheme, for either or both of the Run and Test targets, it fails, because (presumably) the keyboard accessibility labels are localized. Except for the "exists" tests above, the taps are essentially the same as what might recorded if I use the record feature in Xcode. There are two alternative button taps, depending in part on the toggle software keyboard setting.Is there a best practice for dismissing the keyboard, that is more straightforward and locale-agnostic?