I don't really like to use Storyboards (I prefer individual XIB files) and I definitely don't want to use SwiftUI or "Scene Delegates". I'm familiar with the steps necessary to create my own UIWindow in AppDelegate.
With each subsequent version of Xcode, it seems to get harder and harder to set up a new project the way I prefer. In order to get rid of the default storyboard, I have to both delete the file and then remove the word "Main" from Main Interface in the target, which is not obvious (you sort of have to backspace over it and hit Enter).
With the addition of "Scene Delegates" (I don't know what they are and I don't care), I now have to remove some methods from AppDelegate and a key from Info.plist.
With the current version of Xcode, I'm left with an app that has no other values in Info.plist and no methods in AppDelegate except didFinishLaunchingWithOptions.
What happened to all that stuff? Should I manually create it or copy it from an older project? Will iOS even still call the rest of the AppDelegate methods if I create them?
What happens if I want to change something that used to reside in Info.plist, such as Bundle display name? Do I just go in and add it?
Why can't Apple just add a third option to create an empty project instead of making you start with Storyboards or SwiftUI?
I know that Apple is keen on attracting new developers who have time to learn whatever they put out, but I hope they still care about people like me, an iOS developer since 2009 who doesn't want to completely relearn iOS programming every three years.
Thanks,
Frank
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My company uses Beanstalk, a commercial provider of Git repositories.
Within Xcode, there is no option to add a Beanstalk account. When I open Xcode and try to do a VCS operation, Xcode prompts me for my username and password. From then on it works normally except that when I close Xcode and reopen it, it prompts me for the credentials again.
The Git command-line tool doesn't do this. It saved my credentials in the keychain when I first ran it, and doesn't ask me for them anymore.
Is there any way to get Xcode to either use the credentials stored by the Git command line app or store the credentials itself?
I've tried contacting the people who run Beanstalk but they couldn't help me.
Thanks,
Frank
Suppose I have two instances of CBCentralManager:
let manager1 = CBCentralManager(delegate: delegate1, queue: nil)
let manager2 = CBCentralManager(delegate: delegate2, queue: nil)
If I scan for peripherals using manager1, can I take the CBPeripheral that it gives me and connect to it with manager2?
Frank
I added an asset catalog to an old iOS project that I'm in the process of updating. The app was originally created before asset catalogs existed.
I added an image and an icon set to my catalog. The icon works, and the image shows up when I run the app, but Interface Builder doesn't recognize the image by name when I type it into the Image field on an imageview.
I'm guessing that there is something somewhere which causes interface builder to read an asset catalog, which is probably not set on my old project, but I can't figure out what it is.
Thanks,
Frank
I can't get Xcode to permanently remember my Git credentials. It remembers them for as long as Xcode is open, but when I close it and re-open it later, it prompts me for the credentials again. I don't see any kind of an option to save them.
I use the 'git' command-line program on my computer and I've stored my credentials there, but Xcode doesn't seem to be able to access them that way.
How can I get Xcode to remember my credentials?
The crash logs for my app show an occasional crash that happens during the launch of the app. The highlighed line is "CoreBluetooth -[CBUUID initiWithData:]. The stack trace ends with "static AppDelegate.$main()".
My app does use Core Bluetooth, but there are no Bluetooth related functions in the App Delegate. Also, my app does not use [CBUUID initWithData:] explicitly anywhere.
With a stack trace that contains no reference to any of my code, it is extremely difficult to figure out what is going on. I cannot reproduce the crash on any of my own devices. One of my affected users says the app crashes on startup on his phone consistently, even if he deletes and reinstalls it.
I have a customer who wants to give his employees an iPad that does nothing other than display some fixed videos and PDF files. The customer has an Apple Business Manager account an an MDM. The solution we discussed is that my company would build their content into a simple app, distribute it to them via private distribution in the app store, and they would use their MDM to put it on their iPads in Single App Mode.
My concern is that Apple will still need to review the app and may reject it on the grounds that it violates the "Minimum Functionality" rule (4.2). Is this rule enforced even for B2B apps that are destined for private distribution?
Thanks,
Frank
My company uses Git repositories hosted with a service called Beanstalk. These are standard Git repositories that I can work with in the terminal window using the 'git' command line interface, which works fine and remembers my credentials.
I'd like to use Xcode's integrated version control support, but it has never worked correctly with my repositories. In some cases, it works but prompts me to enter my credentials each time I try to do something. In other cases, it fails with a message that says "failed to start SSH session: Unable to exchange encryption keys".
The account settings on Xcode only let you set up accounts with specific hosted Git services (Github, Gitlab, Bitbucket). It's nice that Xcode recognizes these specific Git providers, but how do I set up a repository that is hosted elsewhere?
Thanks.
When I submit a request for a background refresh through BGTaskScheduler, how likely is it that iOS will execute the task at the time I request?
I know that with the pre-iOS 13 way of doing this, iOS didn't really guarantee any particular schedule or frequency except that it it would try to execute the task when it wasn't busy. I don't see any language in BGTaskScheduler that talks about this. The only clue is that the field specifying the time is called "earliestBeginDate" which suggests that iOS might execute it later than that date.
If I submit a BGProcessingTaskRequest instead of a BGAppRefreshTaskRequest, does this change the behavior?
I'd like to know this so that I can tell my users what to expect.
Thanks,
Frank
Hi,
I have a dictionary defined as [String:Encodable].
I'm trying to encode it using JSONEncoder().encode().
When I do this I get a compiler error, "Type 'any Encodable' cannot conform to 'Encodable'".
What does this mean and how do I fix it?
How do I change the timezone on the simulator? I need to test how my app works in other timezones.
Hi,
I'm trying to learn how to use asynchronous functions in Swift. I've used async functions in other languages such as C#, so I understand the general concept.
I want to call getPendingNotificationRequests on UNUserNotificationCenter asynchronously, so I wrote this:
let notificationCenter = UNUserNotificationCenter.current()
let requests = await notificationCenter.getPendingNotificationRequests()
This seems to match the examples I see in documentation, but it doesn't work. All I get is a compiler error that says "Missing argument for parameter 'completionHandler'". What am I doing wrong?
I'm using JSONDecoder().decode(T.Type, from: data) to decode a JSON response from a server. It works in some cases but eventually my program crashes with the error "Stack buffer overflow".
The size of the JSON data I'm trying to decide is about 16k, which is large, but not unusually so.
The decode is happening in a non-main thread, but I tried pushing it into the main thread with the same results.
Most of these crashes occur in the simulator rather than on a real device, but I'd like to figure out the problem anyway.
I thought I'd try dispatching the work into a queue with a larger stack size, but I couldn't figure out how to make one. Is it possible?
Thanks,
Frank
My app downloads files from AWS S3. What we'd like to do is replicate our files across several of Amazon's data centers (regions) to put the content closer to our users, who are worldwide.
What I need is a way to determine in a very gross way which data center would be best to use. For example North America, Europe, Asia, etc. I don't want to use location services since I don't really need the exact location. Is there a simpler way to do this?
I suppose I could use the localization settings, but I don't think that's really guaranteed to represent their actual location.
Thanks,
Frank
I have a tableview and I want to use a custom section header.
Instead of writing out all the code to create the section header, I added the view to my XIB file and connected it to an outlet in my view controller. I hid the view behind another view so it isn't visible and doesn't take up any room in the layout of the screen.
In my view controller, I removed the view from the layout (removeFromSuperview) and then I returned it from my viewForHeaderInSection function. I also implemented heightForHeaderInSection to make sure I get the right height.
When I run my app, what shows up is a blank space in the table where I'm expecting the header view to be. The space is the right height, but there is nothing in it. I do not understand why.
Topic:
UI Frameworks
SubTopic:
UIKit