FROM : mmalc crawford
DATE : Fri Jan 11 20:46:39 2008
On Jan 11, 2008, at 11:38 AM, Jonathan Dann wrote:
> The @"value" is the binding name, not the key. The key is the name
> of your instance variable you've bound to the NSTextField
> NSString * newString // assume this exists
> [aTextField setValue:newString forKey:@"personName"];
> where personName is your ivar.
>
No. Don't do this. (a) It won't work. (b) This is not how bindings
is designed to work.
This is discussed in the documentation.
mmalc
DATE : Fri Jan 11 20:46:39 2008
On Jan 11, 2008, at 11:38 AM, Jonathan Dann wrote:
> The @"value" is the binding name, not the key. The key is the name
> of your instance variable you've bound to the NSTextField
> NSString * newString // assume this exists
> [aTextField setValue:newString forKey:@"personName"];
> where personName is your ivar.
>
No. Don't do this. (a) It won't work. (b) This is not how bindings
is designed to work.
This is discussed in the documentation.
mmalc
| Related mails | Author | Date |
|---|---|---|
| Jonathan Dann | Jan 11, 20:38 | |
| mmalc crawford | Jan 11, 20:46 | |
| Jonathan Dann | Jan 11, 20:51 | |
| Damian Terentiev | Jan 11, 22:27 | |
| mmalc crawford | Jan 11, 22:43 |






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