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MacCatalyst and the User's Documents Folder
I have a SwiftUI-based universal app which creates a file that it stores in documentsDirectory. On iOS/iPadOS, this file is stored in the application's Documents directory and is accessible via the Files app. On MacCatalyst, this operation does the same thing — it creates the file and stores it in ~/Library/Containers/<app directory>/Data/Documents. However what I want is for the document to be stored in ~/Documents, so that it is easily accessible to the user. How can I do that? I'd like it to occur without (for example) having to show a SaveFile panel...
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Dec ’25
Using @Environment with TabView
Let me ask the general question first, then explain the context... Each Tab of a TabView defines a separate View hierarchy. (I'm assuming that the root view of each Tab defines its own NavigationStack.) Since an @Environment is supposed to serve data to the child views in its view hierarchy, does this mean that it is possible to define Environments in each tab's root view with the same name (i.e. key) but different values? (I.e., I want a subview to access an environment value for the current view hierarchy without requiring that the subview have any knowledge of which hierarchy it is being called from.) The actual use case has to do with using @Environment in a tabbed application to inject a router in subviews. (Each Tab has its own NavigationStack and its own NavigationPath.) I have an @Observable router class which manages a NavigationPath.. The root view of each Tab in the application has its own instance of that router object (and hence, it's own NavigationPath). I want to inject that router into all of the subviews in each Tab's view hierarchy, so that I can use path-based navigation. My current implementation injects the router throughout the view hierarchies via constructor injection. This works, but is a real pain and includes a bunch of duplicate code. I would like to use @Environment injection instead, but this can only work if @Environment stores its EnvironmentValues on a per view-hierarchy (rather than a per-application) basis. So, can this approach work? what experience can you share concerting router-based navigation in a TabView-based app? Thanks.
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3w