Search Results

Search found 9235 results on 370 pages for 'ipad apple review'.

Page 34/370 | < Previous Page | 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41  | Next Page >

  • Organize a game set

    - by jncunha
    I'm developing a endless running game and I'm not really sure on how to make the set. The first approach was to make a BIG set like 10240x3072 pixels so that we have a nice portion of set. After having like 3 or 4 sets that go along with each other I would work on making their elements sequential and repeatable. However this is getting really heavy for the iPad 1 (it's running good in the iPad 2 and the New iPad) even though I'm splitting all the set in slices through Photoshop. For the implementation I'm using Cocos2D. Is there any better approach to make something like this but truly efficient for the iPad memory? Thank you.

    Read the article

  • ?Siebel CRM??ipad??????????

    - by junko.ishikawa
    ????????CRM?????????Siebel CRM??ipad?????????? ????????? ?REST API????ipad??????????????????????????REST API???iPhone SDK??????Siebel CRM?ipad?????-????????????????? ???????????????????? ????????????????????????????????????????? ???????????????????????????????????????????? ???????????????????

    Read the article

  • Multi-level navigation controller on left-hand side of UISplitView with a small twist.

    - by user141146
    Hi. I'm trying make something similar to (but not exactly like) the email app found on the iPad. Specifically, I'd like to create a tab-based app, but each tab would present the user with a different UISplitView. Each UISplitView contains a Master and a Detail view (obviously). In each UISplitView I would like the Master to be a multi-level navigational controller where new UIViewControllers are pushed onto (or popped off of) the stack. This type of navigation within the UISplitView is where the application is similar to the native email app. To the best of my knowledge, the only place that has described a decent "splitviewcontroller inside of a uitabbarcontroller" is here: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/2475139/uisplitviewcontroller-in-a-tabbar-uitabbarcontroller and I've tried to follow the accepted answer. The accepted solution seems to work for me (i.e., I get a tab-bar controller that allows me to switch between different UISplitViews). The problem is that I don't know how to make the left-hand side of the UISplitView to be a multi-level navigation controller. Here is the code I used within my app delegate to create the initial "split view 'inside' of a tab bar controller" (it's pretty much as suggested in the aforementioned link). - (BOOL)application:(UIApplication *)application didFinishLaunchingWithOptions:(NSDictionary *)launchOptions { NSMutableArray *tabArray = [NSMutableArray array]; NSMutableArray *array = [NSMutableArray array]; UISplitViewController *splitViewController = [[UISplitViewController alloc] init]; MainViewController *viewCont = [[MainViewController alloc] initWithNibName:@"MainViewController" bundle:nil]; [array addObject:viewCont]; [viewCont release]; viewCont = [[DetailViewController alloc] initWithNibName:@"DetailViewController" bundle:nil]; [array addObject:viewCont]; [viewCont release]; [splitViewController setViewControllers:array]; [tabArray addObject:splitViewController]; [splitViewController release]; array = [NSMutableArray array]; splitViewController = [[UISplitViewController alloc] init]; viewCont = [[Master2 alloc] initWithNibName:@"Master2" bundle:nil]; [array addObject:viewCont]; [viewCont release]; viewCont = [[Slave2 alloc] initWithNibName:@"Slave2" bundle:nil]; [array addObject:viewCont]; [viewCont release]; [splitViewController setViewControllers:array]; [tabArray addObject:splitViewController]; [splitViewController release]; // Add the tab bar controller's current view as a subview of the window [tabBarController setViewControllers:tabArray]; [window addSubview:tabBarController.view]; [window makeKeyAndVisible]; return YES; } the class MainViewController is a UIViewController that contains the following method: - (IBAction)push_me:(id)sender { M2 *m2 = [[[M2 alloc] initWithNibName:@"M2" bundle:nil] autorelease]; [self.navigationController pushViewController:m2 animated:YES]; } this method is attached (via interface builder) to a UIButton found within MainViewController.xib Obviously, the method above (push_me) is supposed to create a second UIViewController (called m2) and push m2 into view on the left-side of the split-view when the UIButton is pressed. And yet it does nothing when the button is pressed (even though I can tell that the method is called). Thoughts on where I'm going wrong? TIA!

    Read the article

  • Rendering a Long Document on iPad

    - by benjismith
    I'm implementing a document viewer with highlighting/annotation capabilities for a custom document format on iPad. The documents are kind of long (100 to 200 pages, if printed on paper) and I've had a hard time finding the right approach. Here are the requirments: 1) Basic rich-text styling: control of left/right margins. Control of font name, size, foreground/background color, and line spacing. Bold, italics, underline, etc. 2) Selection and highlighting of arbitrary text regions (not limited to paragraph boundaries, like in Safari/UIWebView). 3) Customization of the Cut/Copy/Paste popup (what is that thing called anyhow? UIActionBar?) This is one of the essential requirements of the app. My first implementation was based on UIWebView. I just rendered the document as HTML with CSS for text styling. But I couldn't get the kind of text selection behavior I wanted (across paragraph boundaries) and the UIActionBar can't be customized from within UIWebView. So I started working on a javascript approach, faking the device text-selection behavior using JQuery to trap touch events and dynamically modifying the DOM to change the background color of selected regions of text. I built a fake UIActionBar control as a hidden DIV, positioning it and unhiding it whenever there was an active selection region. Not too shabby. The main problem is that it's SLOOOOOOOW. Scrolling through the document is nice and quick, but dynamically changing the DOM is not very snappy. Plus, I couldn't figure out how to recreate the magnifier loupe, so my fake text-selection GUI doesn't look quite the same as the native implementation. Also, I haven't yet implemented the communication bridge between the javascript layer and the objective-c layer (where the rest of the app lives), but it was shaping up to be a huge hassle. So I've been looking at CoreText, but there are precious few examples on the web. I spent a little time with this simple little demo: http://github.com/jonasschnelli/I7CoreTextExample/ It shows how to use CoreText to draw an NSAttributedText string into a UIView. But it has its own problems: It doesn't implement text-selection behavior, and it doesn't present a UIActionBar, so I don't have any idea how to make that happen. And, more importantly, it tries to draw the entire document all at once, with significant performance degradations for long documents. My documents can have thousands of paragraphs, and less than 1% of the document is ever on screen at a time. On the plus side, these documents already contain precise formatting information. I know the exact page-position of every line of text, so I don't need a layout engine. Does anyone know how to implement this sort of view using CoreText? I understand that a full-fledged implementation is overkill for a question like this, but I'm looking for a good CoreText example with a few basic requirements: 1) Precise layout & formatting control (using the formatting metrics and text styles I've already calculated). 2) Arbitrary selection of text. 3) Customization of the UIActionBar. 4) Efficient recycling of resources for off-screen objects. I'd be happy to implement my own recycling when text elements scroll off-screen, but wouldn't that require re-implementing UIScrollView? I'm brand-new to iPhone development, and still getting used to Objective-C, but I've been working in other languages (Java, C#, flex/actionscript, etc) for more than ten years, so I feel confident in my ability to get the work done, if only I had a better feel for the iPhone SDK and the common coding patterns for stuff like this. Is it just me, or does the SDK documentation really suck? Anyhow, thanks for your help!

    Read the article

  • Building a Universal iPad App - Where is the device recognition code?

    - by JustinXXVII
    I noticed that when I create a new project in XCode for a Universal iPad/iPhone application, the template comes with two separate App Delegate files, one for each device. I can't seem to locate the place in code where it tries to decide which app delegate to use. I have an existing iPhone project I'd like to port to iPad. My thinking was that if I went ahead and designed the iPad project, I could just import my iPhone classes and nibs, and then use the App Delegate and UIDevice to decide which MainWindow.xib to load. The process went like this: Create an iPad project coded as a split-view create brand new classes and nibs for the iPad import iPhone classes and nibs Change build/target settings in accordance with Universal Apps Use [[UIDevice currentDevice] model] in the AppDelegate to decide which MainWindow to load Will this work, or does the app just automatically know which device it's being deployed on? Thanks for any insight you can offer.

    Read the article

  • iPhone App on iPad - What is the extra effort?

    - by hol
    I started to develop an iPhone App for a client but the binary not yet submitted to Apple. My client asked me whether they can run the iPhone App also on the iPad. I am not sure what to answer. I am away from home and cannot even check how this all works in XCode. I wonder whether I have to submit two binaries two Apple - one for iPhone and one for iPad - or how this all works? If somebody with experience can explain me. Basically I need to figure out how much more effort I have to consider if it is only making the app work on the iPad. I do not mean the effort to redesign the whole app being a real "iPad app". Just to make it work and when somebody downloads the app and it can be for an iPhone and for an iPad and it does not matter.

    Read the article

  • How can I recover a .pages document with only an iPad?

    - by waiwai933
    I had this problem a few hours ago, and was really frustrated by it, so I'd thought I'd share: Scenario: My computer with Pages has died I have a Pages file on a flash drive that I need now I don't want to reformat the document from a plain text version I have an iPad with Pages I can't email my file to my iPad because Pages files are really folders How can I recover my file?

    Read the article

  • How to have my iPad use the 2008 server's internet connection?

    - by Dabblernl
    I have an iPad that is connected to the Wireless router in my network. However, this router is connected to my Win 2008 server, which in its turn is connected to the internet. The iPad is unable to connect to the public url for the exchange server on the server (www.example.com) and has erratic internet access, where Windows laptops are provided with faultless internet access, even when they are not a member of the domain. How do I solve this?

    Read the article

  • Why does Apple use Objective-C for iPhone development? (App Store)

    - by Luca Matteis
    I'm interested to know your opinion on why Apple uses a language such as Objective-C for app development. Does Apple's app store allow apps written only in this language? Does apple even look at your source-code or does it just care of the binary output? I learned that most of their app rejection (in the app store) is based upon apps crashing (probably memory leaks in which Objective-c is not very efficient unless you use a GC). Why not let developers use a safer language, like a scripting language? I think these are important questions for a developer (I don't even use Apple's products) because it seems like Apple's app store is the MOST successful app sale place on the web.

    Read the article

  • Apple lance une série de mise à jour pour iTunes, QuickTime, iPhoto et plein d'autres

    Après la mise à jour pour Mac OS X 10.6.3, Apple lance sa série de mise à jour, avec au menu, une mise à jour pour iTunes 9.1 avec le support pour l'iPad, une pour QuickTime 7, iPhoto, etc... : iTunes 9.1: Citation: iTunes 9.1 comprend plusieurs nouvelles fonctions et améliorations, qui permettent notamment :de se synchroniser avec l'iPad pour profiter de vos musiques, vos films, vos séries TV et vos livres favoris et bien plus encore, lors de vos déplacements. d'organiser et de synchroniser des livres téléchargés depu...

    Read the article

  • Déjà 75 millions de chiffre d'affaires pour l'iPad et 150.000 pré-commandes pour la tablette d'Apple

    Mise à jour du 15/02/10 NB : Les commentaires sur cette mise à jour commencent ici dans le topic Déjà 75 millions de chiffre d'affaires pour l'iPad Et 150.000 pré-commandes pour la tablette d'Apple que personne n'a encore testée Apple vient d'ouvrir les pré-commandes pour l'iPad, son futur Tablet PC (lire ci-avant). Cette commercialisation ne concerne pour l'instant que les Etats-Unis. L'Europe devra encore patienter un petit mois. Lors des deux premières heures, 50.000 réservation...

    Read the article

  • What should come first: testing or code review?

    - by Silver Light
    Hello! I'm quite new to programming design patterns and life cycles and I was wondering, what should come first, code review or testing, regarding that those are done by separate people? From the one side, why bother reviewing code if nobody checked if it even works? From the other, some errors can be found early, if you do the review before testing. Which approach is recommended and why? Thank you!

    Read the article

  • Book Review: Introducing Microsoft WebMatrix

    Visual Studio 2010 is a robust development environment for building .NET applications. However, developers are always on the hunt for free tools such as WebMatrix, which is freeware developed by Microsoft for buildling cost effective .NET applications. In this review, Anand examines the coverage of a book titled Introducing Microsoft WebMatrix by Laurence Moroney. After reading the review, you will be able to know whether the book will be suitable for you or not.

    Read the article

  • Book Review: Optimizing Windows 7 Pocket Consultant

    It is essential to optimize Windows 7 in order to make use of the features to its full potential. However, it is difficult to find and locate the various elements which require optimization. In this review, Anand examines the contents of Optimizing Windows 7 Pocket Consultant book authored by William Stanek. After reading the review, you will be in a position to judge whether the book will be suitable for you or not.

    Read the article

  • Marché des tablettes : Apple perd des parts tandis que Samsung gagne du terrain

    Marché des tablettes : Apple perd des parts tandis que Samsung gagne du terrain La croissance a encore ralenti au troisième trimestre sur un marché mondial des tablettes où les parts de l'iPad d'Apple n'ont jamais été aussi basses à en croire les estimations du cabinet de recherche IDC. Le marché enregistre une forte croissance annuelle (+ 36,7%) correspondant à 47,6 millions d'unités livrées.Avec seulement 14,1 millions d'unités vendues, la part de marché de l'iPad tombe à 29,6% contre 32,4%...

    Read the article

  • Apple publie 14 nouvelles vidéos de l'iPad 2, qui en détaillent les fonctionnalités

    Apple publie 14 nouvelles vidéos de l'iPad 2, qui en détaillent les fonctionnalités Mise à jour du 10.03.2011 par Katleen Tout est dit dans le titre, ou presque. La firme de Cupertino vient en effet ce jour de publier quatorze vidéos pour présenter son nouvel appareil, qui arrive dans quelques heures dans les magasins. Chaque petit clip se consacre à un élément bien précis, par exemple FaceTime, l'écriture de mails ou encore l'AppStore. Regardez la "visite guidée" de l'iPad 2 S...

    Read the article

  • Safari 5 certified with EBS Release 12 on Apple Mac OS X 10.5 and 10.6

    - by John Abraham
    Oracle E-Business Suite Release 12 (12.0.4 or higher, and 12.1.2 or higher) is now certified with the Safari 5 browser on the following Apple Mac OS X desktop configurations:Mac OS X 10.5 ("Leopard")Mac OS X 10.5 ("Leopard" version 10.5.6 or higher) along with any other security and Java updates listed in the 'Software Update' program on the MacSafari version 5 (5.0.2 or higher)Apple Java/JRE plugin 5 (1.5.0_13 or higher)Mac OS X 10.6 ("Snow Leopard")Mac OS X 10.6 ("Snow Leopard" version 10.6.3 or higher) along with any other security and Java updates listed in the 'Software Update' program on the Mac.Safari version 5 (5.0.2 or higher)Apple Java/JRE plugin 6 (1.6.0_20 or higher)

    Read the article

  • Apple de plus en plus critiqué sur l'AppStore, Mozilla et Opera montent au créneau

    Mise à jour du 12.03.2010 par Katleen Apple de plus en plus critiqué sur l'AppStore, Mozilla et Opera montent au créneau contre sa politique de validation La manière dont Apple gère la validation des applications publiables sur l'AppStore n'en finit plus de faire des mécontents. Déjà assez restrictive, cette politique s'est encore ressérée depuis que les applications à connotation sexuelle ont été interdites. Le soucis c'est que la manière de juger l'obscénité d'un contenu diffère selon les personnes, et chez Apple cette dernière est très stricte : un simple maillot de bain est considéré comme innaproprié. Quelles que soient les raisons de cette sévérité, ces contraintes exaspèr...

    Read the article

  • L'ITC va examiner les mobiles d'HTC, pour répondre à la plainte déposée par Apple

    Mise à jour du 01.04.2010 par Katleen L'ITC va examiner les mobiles d'HTC, pour répondre à la plainte déposée par Apple L'ITC (U.S. International Trade Commission) va venir fourrer son nez dans l'affaire qui oppose Apple à HTC. La commission a en effet décidé de mener enquête en examinant les smartphones produits par le taiwannais. C'est l'entreprise de Steve Jobs qui a fait appel à l'ITC en portant plainte pour usage non-autorisé de ses brevets. Hier, un juge administratif de l'ITC a déclaré prendre possession du cas. Il a désormais 45 jours pour fixer une date de complément d'enquête. Apple demande purement et simplement que les mobiles d'HTC soie...

    Read the article

  • Apple sort la bêta d'iOS 6.1 pour les développeurs, ainsi que la bêta de Xcode 4.6

    Apple sort la bêta d'iOS 6.1 pour les développeurs ainsi que la bêta de Xcode 4.6 À peine avoir propulsé la mise à jour mineure iOS 6.0.1 de son système d'exploitation mobile aux consommateurs, Apple met à la disposition des développeurs la prochaine évolution de sa plateforme. Ceux-ci peuvent dès aujourd'hui télécharger la mise à jour iOS 6.1, afin de découvrir les nouveautés de l'OS et préparer leurs applications avant la sortie grand public de la mouture. iOS 6.1 beta apporte quelques améliorations, surtout à son application native de cartographie Plans, très critiquée dans la version précédente. Il faut noter qu'Apple a mis avant un bouton permettant de soumettre un problème s...

    Read the article

  • Apple actualise la gamme MacBook Pro

    Apple a renouvelé sa gamme de MacBook Pro. Ce qu'il faut retenir : Le MacBook Pro 13" gagne encore en autonomie, pouvant atteindre jusqu'à 10 heures. Il possède un processeur graphique NVidia 320M inconnu au catalogue NVidia. Il semblerait que ce soit un processeur graphique fait spécialement par NVidia à la demande d'Apple. Les MacBook Pro 15" et 17" accueille les nouveaux (peut on encore dire nouveaux ?) processeurs Intel Core i5 et i7. Du coup, ils embarquent également le processeur graphique Intel HD qui ne vaut rien par rapport au processeur Nvidia qui équipait la génération précédente. Mais elle est secondée par une carte NVidia GT330M, présentée comme étant 2 fois plus puissante que la NVidia 320M. C'est surtout le fait qu'il ne faille plus rien faire pour basculer d'une carte graphique à l'autre. Et ça, c'est vraiment bien. Apple propose également, en option, une dalle de 1680*1050 sur le 15". Ce qui est une excellente chose.

    Read the article

  • Apple Magic Trackpad multitouch configuration

    - by Sureshkannan Duraisamy
    Today I installed the Ubuntu 10.10 release on my Desktop PC. I was running Ubuntu 10.04 LTS with an Apple Magic Trackpad and everything was working fine. After today's fresh installation of Ubuntu 10.10, I don't see my Apple Magic Trackpad's multitouch working. Two-finger scrolling and three-finger third mouse button clicking are completely broken. Has anyone else experienced a similar issue? Has anyone had success with Ubuntu 10.10 and an Apple Magic TrackPad? Please help me to fix this issue. Your help is highly appreciated...

    Read the article

< Previous Page | 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41  | Next Page >