To get a sense of what I'm doing without posting pages of code... I have an NSOperation that I'm using to process files as they are added to a folder. In that NSOperation I'm using the NSNotificationCenter to send notifications to an NSView whenever a new job is started. The idea is, that I want to add a new subview to give me some information about the job that just started. The problem is I can't seem to get new subviews to draw. Here is what I have right now.
- (void)drawRect:(NSRect)dirtyRect
{
NSLog(@"Draw Count %i", [jobViewArray count]);
int i = 0;
while (i < [jobViewArray count]) {
[self addSubview:[jobViewArray objectAtIndex:i]];
}
}
and then further down:
-(void) newJobNotification: (NSNotification *) notification
{
if (!jobViewArray)
jobViewArray = [[NSMutableArray alloc] init];
++jobCount;
NSRect rect;
rect.size.width = 832;
rect.size.height = 120;
NSPoint point = { 0, ((jobCount * 120) - 120) };
rect.origin = point;
ProgressView *newJob = [[ProgressView alloc] initWithFrame:rect];
[jobViewArray addObject:newJob];
NSLog(@"Notice Count %i", [jobViewArray count]);
}
}
When I use my app to add a job, the notification is properly received by my NSView, the subvie开发者_JS百科w is properly added to the jobViewArray
, but then when drawRect:
gets called again my jobViewArray
is empty. It's the first time I've tried to do something like this so I'm probably doing something completely wrong here... I guess that goes with out saying since it doesn't work huh?
You shouldn't be adding the subview to the view in drawRect:. When you receive the notification you should add the subviews there because the second time the notification comes around, you're going to add 2 subviews, then the next time 3 subviews and so one.
If you add the subview in the notification then you'll not need to mess around with the array.
精彩评论