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Mastering macOS Programming

You're reading from   Mastering macOS Programming Hands-on guide to macOS Sierra Application Development

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781786461698
Length 626 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Stuart Grimshaw Stuart Grimshaw
Author Profile Icon Stuart Grimshaw
Stuart Grimshaw
Gregory Casamento Gregory Casamento
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Gregory Casamento
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Toc

Table of Contents (21) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Hello macOS 2. Basic Swift FREE CHAPTER 3. Checking Out the Power of Xcode 4. MVC and Other Design Patterns 5. Advanced Swift 6. Cocoa Frameworks - The Backbone of Your Apps 7. Creating Views Programmatically 8. Strings and Text 9. Getting More from Interface Builder 10. Drawing on the Strength of Core Graphics 11. Core Animation 12. Handling Errors Gracefully 13. Persistent Storage 14. The Benefits of Core Data 15. Connect to the World - Networking 16. Concurrency and Asynchronous Programming 17. Understanding Xcodes Debugging Tools 18. LLDB and the Command Line 19. Deploying Third - Party Code 20. Wrapping It Up

NSTextView


We have our strings, we have our attributes, and we'll now take a look at the place where we put them to use: NSTextView.

An NSTextView, a subclass of NSText, is actually a complex, multi-facetted object, consisting of a small, specialized stack of object types, all hidden behind what appears to the user to be nothing but a blank part of the screen. If only they knew.

NSTextView provides the view in which the text is displayed, exposing the properties textContainer and textStorage, with which we can supply it with text, and display that text on the screen. The two objects that these properties expose communicate with each other via a LayoutManager object.

The MVC pattern of text views

Cocoa's text view is in fact a microcosmic version of the Model-View-Controller design pattern followed by so much of Apple's frameworks:

  • NSTextStorage is the model, containing all the string and attributes data
  • NSTextContainer is the view, providing the de facto page onto which we draw text
  • NSLayoutManager...
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