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missing package product

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Reply to Non-Public Library SockPuppetGizmo
I can upload our App package successfully via Application Loader. But, I still got an email as below. 😟Invalid WatchKit Support - The bundle contains an invalid implementation of WatchKit. The app may have been built or signed with non-compliant or pre-release tools. Visit developer.apple.com for more information.Once these issues have been corrected, you can then redeliver the corrected binary.Regards,The App Store team
Jun ’15
UIContainerView seems missing?
I am not able to create an outlet between my UIViewController and a UIContainerView in IB. In the the past I've used UIView for the IBOutlet definition and IB let me create the outlet. In iOS 9, Xcode 7 no can do in either Swift 2 or Objective-C. UIContainerView is not defined in either Swift 2 or Objective-C and IB will not make a connection using UIView for the definition.Anyone have any ideas?
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Jun ’15
Pass pointer from vertex to fragment
Hello I was wondering if there is a way to pass a pointer or array from a Vertex shader to a Fragment shader. Right now it dosn't seem possible, which means I have to pass arrays as individual variables which is making development very tedious. I'm hoping there is a way to do this that I've just missed after going over documentation, or maybe it is possible in the new update? If anyone can help it would be greatly appreciated!
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Jun ’15
Reply to almost afraid to ask on new background modes.
They've added many, many APIs to multitasking and background execution to support the vast majority of use cases,and one of those use cases that Apple deems valuable is a push notification that opens the app and allows an app background execution for some amount of time.it would be astonishing if someone could explain how this use case that seems to be valuable enough for Apple to actually put into action, to be any different from a local notification doing exactly the same thing? battery wise or security wise, or any other wise.... remember a local notification can be done now using what ever battery it does use, having the app open and do background execution also uses the same amount of battery as when a push notification does it... there literally would be no difference... and obviously no difference with security since a push notification can do it.simply astonishing....excuse me while I cringe and answer another email about why?? because somehow they missed the CAUTION: in the description in th
Topic: App & System Services SubTopic: Core OS Tags:
Jun ’15
Reply to Upload from Xcode crashing
I'm having the same issue. Had no problems two days ago. Based on the exception, my guess is that they have some UI call on a background thread that's uploading the package to iTunes Connect. Not sure what would force xcode to make the call now vs. a couple of days ago, though. I haven't swapped over to application loader, yet. I guess I need to give that a try.
Jun ’15
Reply to Why must a modern language have Curly Braces?
Ha. 🙂Lisp/Scheme is very cool, but I don't miss functions that end like this: )))))))), or nested lets drifting rightward. And how to blend the Lisp syntax style with OO syntax style (object.method, obj.property), which is often very clean, and useful for IDE auto-completion. One call looks fine. (obj.method 1 2 3) But now chain calls on that. ((obj.method 1 2 3).method2 a b). Yuck.Robps. I first wrote obj.m e t h, but it censored it. See: obj.****. No Breaking Bad discussion here.
Topic: Programming Languages SubTopic: Swift Tags:
Jun ’15
Reply to Having a workout count toward green exercise ring
Yeah I have a couple theories on what's going on:1. It's just not implemented yet, or is buggy, in this first beta2. Only workouts of a certain HKWorkoutActivityType get counted toward the activity ring3. I'm missing somethingI'm fairly certain it's not #3, since I essentially copied the code presented at the WWDC session on HealthKit, and it *is* logging the workout in HealthKit.I'm hoping that it's just #1 and not #2, and the next beta (or the one after that) should reveal which one it is.
Topic: App & System Services SubTopic: Core OS Tags:
Jun ’15
Reply to When will Xcode 7 submissions be allowed?
Yeah, this is the type answer I was semi expecting, but there's a difference between previous XCode/iOS releases and this years releases.Previously we could test the product that the end user receives. This is no longer the case.Now, the functionality of XCode is basically split across the developers side and Apple's side.I'd like to have more to go on than a hope and a prayer that our code works after running through the black box that is the bitcode compilation process.
Jun ’15
Optionals are not very “Swift”
Swift is a great new language: a compilation and evolution of the best languages. However, Swift’s use of optionals seems more like a devolution. I would guess that many programmers, including the very experienced, have found these optionals to be more of a nuisance than a help. Nil is basically a value like any other value. If an object (and everything is basically an object) returns a value of nil, a good programmer deals with it just as they would deal with any other returned value. If your code crashes, then fix it, just as if it crashed for any other reason. Yes, there are probably some arguable underlying reasons for the inclusion of optionals into Swift, but these mechanics should be dealt with internally in the language and not be passed on to the programmer. After all, Swift is designed to be a high-level language, but the inclusion of optionals drags it down and ruins the visual beauty of the code.I really appreciate the work and thought that must have gone into this language; it’s a pleasure to wor
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Jun ’15
Reply to Swift 1.2 compilation in Xcode 7 beta
The swift runtime is currently still being compiled into each application, so even if you could compile the older 1.2 framework code separately it wouldn't work properly with any app compiled with the 2.0 runtime included.It is possible to have multiple versions of XCode installed at the same time; they each use their own packaged tools, and there is a setting in preferences to choose which XCode versions's tools to use from the command line.You probably won't need to wait years though, for 2.0 compatible frameworks/pods/whatevers. You may need to do some research to see which have been updated so far in the last two weeks, and then update the settings for those 3rd party projects to get different branches, at least until Xcode 7 and Swift 2 are out of beta.And if you're using a 3rd party framework that hasn't already been updated to the 2.0 syntax, you could give it a try yourself. It's often just tedious rather than difficult, correcting many of the same minor issues (functions that have migrated t
Topic: Programming Languages SubTopic: Swift Tags:
Jun ’15
Reply to Scene Kit Editor - selecting nodes
I am having the same problem. Even if only the first layer of three blocks are selected they won't rotate as one but rotate individually.What mouse/keyboard combination am I missing to:1) Select multiple blocks so they rotate as one2) Rotate block(s) so they snap to 90 degree angles?Is there a definitive list of mouse/trackpad/keyboard actions that can be performed in the scenekit editor to pan/zoom/rotate objects etc?Many thanks...Robert
Topic: Graphics & Games SubTopic: SceneKit Tags:
Jun ’15
Reply to Optionals are not very “Swift”
There's a theory-based answer and a practice-based answer here, and they both come to the same conclusion.Practice first: there are basically three ways to deal with unexpected missing values. You can crash (CF style), do nothing (ObjC style), or refuse to compile (Swift style). We've found from long experience that the first and second tend to lead to crashes and unintuitive logic errors in real apps and frameworks. Tony Hoare, who invented null references in 1965, refers to them as his billion dollar mistake.Theory answer: the inhabitants of a type are the possible values of that type. So the inhabitants of Int are the set of integers that fit in its size, and so on. nil is special in languages like Objective-C because it's automatically an inhabitant of *every* reference type. So when you say this is an NSString you're actually saying this is an NSString or nil and so on. Allowing people to specify this is an NSString separately from this is an NSString or nil allows them to be more precise about
Topic: Programming Languages SubTopic: Swift Tags:
Jun ’15