Search Results

Search found 5153 results on 207 pages for 'apple delegates'.

Page 133/207 | < Previous Page | 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140  | Next Page >

  • Memory leaks in libxml2.2

    - by KSH
    I am using libxml2 to parse xml content in my iPhone app. The xml content is downloaded from a server similar to the Apple's own TopSongs sample app. When I check for leaks using the Instruments tool, I see memory leaks being reported on xmlNewParserCtxt, xmlNewInputStream and xmlAllocParserInputBuffer. I have called xmlFreeParserCtxt(context) at applicable places (dealloc). Am I missing something else ? Is this a known issue to contend with when using libxml2 parsers ?

    Read the article

  • PHP: separate value in array according to alphabate order

    - by Sanjay
    hi, i want to find values in array according to alphabate and want to make list in of array values according to alphabate order. my array is like that: Array ( [0] = Array ( [0] = Adidas [1] = AKG [2] = Apple [3] = Barrats [4] = Canon [5] = Dell [6] = Dixons [7] = HTC [8] = Liverpool [9] = Microsoft [10] = Pirelli Tyres [11] = ) ) and i want to make a list of values according to alphabate like this: A Adidas AKG plz any idea?

    Read the article

  • Sliding and fading effects

    - by wayneps
    How do I come up with this, the sidebar and the top sliding bit: Apple iPad Page Scriptaulous or jQuery, etc. I'd like this for one of my pages on my website to do the effects on load. Thanks :)

    Read the article

  • Why Swift is 100 times slower than C in this image processing test?

    - by xiaobai
    Like many other developers I have been very excited at the new Swift language from Apple. Apple has boasted its speed is faster than Objective C and can be used to write operating system. And from what I learned so far, it's a very type-safe language and able to have precisely control over the exact data type (like integer length). So it does look like having good potential handling performance critical tasks, like image processing, right? That's what I thought before I carried out a quick test. The result really surprised me. Here is a much simplified image alpha blending code snippet in C: test.c: #include <stdio.h> #include <stdint.h> #include <string.h> uint8_t pixels[640*480]; uint8_t alpha[640*480]; uint8_t blended[640*480]; void blend(uint8_t* px, uint8_t* al, uint8_t* result, int size) { for(int i=0; i<size; i++) { result[i] = (uint8_t)(((uint16_t)px[i]) *al[i] /255); } } int main(void) { memset(pixels, 128, 640*480); memset(alpha, 128, 640*480); memset(blended, 255, 640*480); // Test 10 frames for(int i=0; i<10; i++) { blend(pixels, alpha, blended, 640*480); } return 0; } I compiled it on my Macbook Air 2011 with the following command: gcc -O3 test.c -o test The 10 frame processing time is about 0.01s. In other words, it takes the C code 1ms to process one frame: $ time ./test real 0m0.010s user 0m0.006s sys 0m0.003s Then I have a Swift version of the same code: test.swift: let pixels = UInt8[](count: 640*480, repeatedValue: 128) let alpha = UInt8[](count: 640*480, repeatedValue: 128) let blended = UInt8[](count: 640*480, repeatedValue: 255) func blend(px: UInt8[], al: UInt8[], result: UInt8[], size: Int) { for(var i=0; i<size; i++) { var b = (UInt16)(px[i]) * (UInt16)(al[i]) result[i] = (UInt8)(b/255) } } for i in 0..10 { blend(pixels, alpha, blended, 640*480) } The build command line is: xcrun swift -O3 test.swift -o test Here I use the same O3 level optimization flag to make the comparison hopefully fair. However, the resulting speed is 100 time slower: $ time ./test real 0m1.172s user 0m1.146s sys 0m0.006s In other words, it takes Swift ~120ms to processing one frame which takes C just 1 ms. I also verified the memory initialization time in both test code are very small compared to the blend processing function time. What happened?

    Read the article

  • Would a pointer to a pointer to nil match against NULL?

    - by dontWatchMyProfile
    Example: A validation method contains this check to see if an NSError object shall be created or not: - (BOOL)validateCompanyName:(NSString *)newName error:(NSError **)outError { if (outError != NULL) { // do it... Now I pass an NSError object, like this: NSError *error = nil; BOOL ok = [self validateCompanyName:@"Apple" error:&error]; I'm not sure if this matches the check for not NULL. I think it's not NULL, since I believe NULL is not nil. Maybe someone can clear this up?

    Read the article

  • iPhone app with UIWebView

    - by chaitanya
    Hi, I have a doubt in developing apps for iphone, Can I develop authentication page(with secure login id and pwd) through which I can load my webcontent. Does apple allow applications having login credentials or not? Can anyone please let me know this. Thanks in advance..

    Read the article

  • How to reload python module from itself?

    - by mivulf
    I have a python module with a lot of variables. These variables are used and changed by many other modules. And I want to reload this module from itself when it happens (for refresh). How to do that? # ================================== # foo.py spam = 100 def set_spam(value): spam = value foo = reload(foo) # reload module from itself # ================================== # bar.py import foo print foo.spam # I expect 100 # assume that value changes here from some another modules (for example, from eggs.py, apple.py and fruit.py) foo.set_spam(200) print foo.spam # I expect 200

    Read the article

  • How do I most efficienty check the unique elements in a list?

    - by alex
    let's say I have a list li = [{'q':'apple','code':'2B'}, {'q':'orange','code':'2A'}, {'q':'plum','code':'2A'}] What is the most efficient way to return the count of unique "codes" in this list? In this case, the unique codes is 2, because only 2B and 2A are unique. I could put everything in a list and compare, but is this really efficient?

    Read the article

  • Java TokenField like Cocoa's?

    - by ShadesJeff
    Does anyone know of an existing Java component that implements a TokenField, similar to Cocoa's NSTokenField? An overview of the Cocoa control is at: http://developer.apple.com/mac/library/documentation/Cocoa/Conceptual/TokenField%5FGuide/Introduction/Introduction.html Suggestions for implementation? Thanks!

    Read the article

  • iPhone dev: Get keys (public / private)

    - by Jonny
    I'm using another computer than normal to do iPhone dev. Now I'm trying to get my apps onto my iPhone, but fail with the certificates, keys and stuff. Refer to this thread: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/613719/iphone-provisioning-problem-public-private-key Actually I'm able to download my cert no problem from Apple's site, but how would I get at the keys needed? (private, public), I see no way of getting them...

    Read the article

  • Objective C convention: When to use For and when to use With

    - by Howard
    According to the Apple guideline , seems it is confusing, e.g. for method viewWithTag In Java, I would have a method called getViewByTag // Java version, equivalent to viewWithTag in Obj-C But I also found there are some method like objectForKey, so why not just use objectWithKey instead? getObjectByKey or just get // Java version, equivalent to objectForKey, // but why not objectWithKey? Or not viewForKey above?

    Read the article

  • Applescript download & open link

    - by tdskate
    I've set a rule in Apple Mail to run a "Download & Open link" applescript. I would like this script to download the url in the mail message and after downloading it should open the file. No idea how to start on this...

    Read the article

  • Highlight table view cells when user drags across rows

    - by chronos
    I have a grouped table view that does not need to scroll. I'd like each cell to highlight as the user moves their finger down the screen and call didSelectRowAtIndexPath on release. This behaviour can be seen done by apple in 'settings mail add account'? I can't seem to replicate it myself, all I can get is the default, where the cell deselects as soon as the user moves their finger.

    Read the article

  • Why Duplicate the “Release” configuration to "Disctribution"?

    - by Horace Ho
    On the Apple guide, there is a step before building the AppStore version: Open the Xcode project and Duplicate the “Release” configuration in the Configurations pane of the project's Info panel. Rename this new configuration “Distribution”. Why this step is needed? Can I skip this step and use the "Release" configuration to build the final version for AppStore?

    Read the article

  • Is there a limit to the size of an application in the Android Marketplace?

    - by Trukdero
    I know from reading this: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1230457/is-there-a-size-limit-for-ota-android-market-downloads/1232145#1232145 That there wasn't a limit to the size of an application that could be downloaded over the air (OTA) but I wonder if a limit, like that imposed by the Apple App Store (20MB) exists now that the Nexus one is running on AT&T's 3G network as of today. Thanks in advance for your help/ Truk

    Read the article

  • UITextField with numbers and default keyboard

    - by n35
    Created a UITextField for "Postal Code/ZIP" field with a keyboardType of UIKeyboardTypeDefault. I would like to use the default keyboard but want the numbers & symbols to be shown by default as apposed to letters. Apple does this when you are entering addresses in the Contacts.app. Anyone know how to get this accomplished?

    Read the article

< Previous Page | 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140  | Next Page >