FROM : David Wu
DATE : Thu Nov 21 23:00:51 2002
Well.. it appears from this that your custom view has no size set.. it
may very well be in the print panel, but you just can't see it.
initWithFrame: is the designated initializer for NSView...
normally an accessory view is loaded from a nib, so it has controls and
such in it.
> customePrintView = [[NSView alloc] init];
> [printOp setAccessoryView:customePrintView];
> [printOp setShowPanels:YES];
> [printOp runOperation];
>
what's the proper syntax for the setting up absolute size for a view??
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DATE : Thu Nov 21 23:00:51 2002
Well.. it appears from this that your custom view has no size set.. it
may very well be in the print panel, but you just can't see it.
initWithFrame: is the designated initializer for NSView...
normally an accessory view is loaded from a nib, so it has controls and
such in it.
> customePrintView = [[NSView alloc] init];
> [printOp setAccessoryView:customePrintView];
> [printOp setShowPanels:YES];
> [printOp runOperation];
>
what's the proper syntax for the setting up absolute size for a view??
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cocoa-dev mailing list | <email_removed>
Help/Unsubscribe/Archives: http://www.lists.apple.com/mailman/listinfo/cocoa-dev
Do not post admin requests to the list. They will be ignored.
| Related mails | Author | Date |
|---|---|---|
| David Wu | Nov 21, 23:00 | |
| Scott Anguish | Nov 22, 02:57 |






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