character is of string is always changing the position when ever I change the string value by using CCLabelBMFont - objective-c

I update the score label when I'm playing my game and I display it by using CCLabelBMFont, when the score changes, each character of the score label always change the position of the label.
I want to keep it the same position!
Example: 00:01 take small space than 00:50; when the text change the CCLabelBMFont reposition the text again. help me , how to keep the same position?

Your bitmap font was created from a true type font that has a variable width.
Only fixed-width fonts like Courier will give you the same string width for the same amount of characters in the string. Strings drawn with non-fixed-width fonts will have varying width depending on the characters in the font, ie a 'w' character has greater width than an 'i' character.
Open FontBook.app (it comes with every Mac) and in the Collection panel select "Fixed Width" to see only the fonts with a fixed width. On my system I have these fixed width fonts installed:
FYI, Monaco is the default font used by Xcode.

It is hard to tell by the question, but my guess is that you are talking about the actual positioning of your label changing, meaning your alignment is not what you want it to be (justified left instead of justified right for instance).
Left Justified:
test
testtest
Right Justified:
test
testtest
If this is what you are talking about, you can change the text alignment by changing the nodes anchor point.
// for right justified
label.anchorPoint = ccp(1, 0);

When you are saying "always changing the position", do you mean "left side isn't staying in the same place"?
CCNode class has anchorPoint property, which determines which point of this node is "pinned" to the point in node's parent. Anchor point of (0, 0) means bottom left corner, (1, 1) - top right, (0.5, 0.5) - center. All positioning and transformations take place around anchor point.
Set anchorPoint property of your label to mean the point which you want to have "pinned" when content size of label changes. Examples:
if you want top left corner to be stationary:
label.anchorPoint = ccp(0, 1);
if you want the middle of left side to be stationary:
label.anchorPoint = ccp(0, 0.5);

Related

Why does NSTextField with usesSingleLineMode set to YES has intrinsic content size of multiline text?

I want to draw single line textfield with default border.
So I entered some multiline text into it(just for test for future cases) and set the flags
Swift:
textfield.usesSingleLineMode = true
textfield.maximumNumberOfLines = 1
Objective-C:
self.textfield.usesSingleLineMode = YES;
self.textfield.maximumNumberOfLines = 1;
But I got in console:
(lldb) po self.textfield.intrinsicContentSize
(width = 511.5, height = 174)
I've tested all lineBreakModes, including NSLineBreakByTruncatingTail.
Here is a field in IB:
Of course I can:
Overload intrinsicContentSize method
Filter strings keeping only first line
But it looks like a crutch =( Do you have any ideas how to fix it without crutches? Do you think it is an AppKit bug or my mistake?
PS In any case, thanks for attention.
This is not a bug. By default the NSTextField is trying to display as much text possible. I made a sample application, that contains a long line of text in the title of the NSTextField. Set it to "Uses Single Line Mode" and set line break to "Truncate Tail". I put leading, top and trailing layout constraints on the view. Now when i input the text into the text field, it will make the horizontal width of the window very wide. This is Autolayout in action.
To fix this you need to select the NSTextField, choose the Size inspector and set the Horizontal Content Compression Resistance Priority to a lower number. In the sample application I changed it from 750 to low (250).
Resize content view to an acceptable size, and you are off to the races.

JSX (Photoshop) - document resolution in dpi

I'm working with a jsx script in Photoshop that resizes images to a specific size. The resolution is set at 200 dpi. After running the script, I can check this under Image > Image Size.
Problem is, depending on the image, it initially tends to show the resolution in dots/cm instead of dots/inch. The number itself is correct either way, but I'd like to see it mentioned there as the latter. Is there a way to realize this in JSX?
Thanks!
J
The easy way is to open your Info Panel by going to Window > Info, and then click on the x/y coordinates dropdown in the Info Panel and select inches. The dropdown is the + toward the lower-left of the panel, with the little down arrow at the bottom right of the + symbol (The plus is actually an x axis and y axis representing a coordinate plane). After that, when you check under Image > Image Size, it should show you all information in inches instead of centimeters. This should also show you inches anywhere else you look in Photoshop's interface, too, such as the rulers.
An exception would be that when using selection tools, such as the marquee tool with a setting like "fixed size" selected, you can override the units setting by typing in another unit in the Width and Height sections at the top of the window. You can even mix and match units, making a precise selection that is, for example, exactly 250 pixels (px in the Width setting) by 30 points (pt in the Height setting). And when you check your image size, it should still show you results in inches.
And finally, to answer your question as it was asked, the following code will change your rulerUnits preference without opening the Info Panel.
#target Photoshop
preferences.rulerUnits = Units.INCHES;
Note that if you want to write other scripts, you can change the rulerUnits to whatever units the script calls for, and then at the end of the script put your units back the way you had them.
#target Photoshop
// Save the original rulerUnits setting to a variable
var originalRulerUnits = preferences.rulerUnits;
// Change the rulerUnits to Inches
preferences.rulerUnits = Units.INCHES;
//
// Do magical scripty stuff here...
//
// Restore the original setting
preferences.rulerUnits = originalRulerUnits;
// List of rulerUnits settings available
// Units.CM
// Units.INCHES
// Units.MM
// Units.PERCENT
// Units.PICAS
// Units.PIXELS
// Units.POINTS

xcode - autolayout - prevent overlap of logo + input with footer button

I am having trouble preventing the text inputs from overlapping the footer button.
The footer has been anchored to the bottom of the screen. All the elements up top (logo, title label, and 2 input boxes) all have relative constraints. I try to add a constraint between that last input and the footer button but it pushes the footer off the screen on the smaller iphone.
What do I do??
https://github.com/civilordergone/taskfort_ios
Your issue seems to be in landscape only (I ran your code), where you have, for example, 320 points of vertical space, and an image (128pt), a text label (120pt), two text fields (30 each, for 60pt in total) and a 30pt button at the bottom. Already that's 338pt used, and we haven't accounted for the vertical spacing between your objects.
There simply isn't enough vertical space for all of these items to be vertically positioned while retaining their heights, so something has to be flexible: something has to be able to be vertically shrunk/compressed. Your logo and app name (Taskfort) are two candidates.
Here are some of the changes and/or points of consideration:
An ImageView with a height and a width equality constraint will always be that size, but for your layout, it has to be able to be compressed. I removed the height & width constraints and added an Aspect Ratio constraint, so the logo keeps its aspect ratio, but can now scale. I added a relationship constraint between the logo's left side and the left side of the Taskfort label.
The image has a relationship to the top of the screen, saying it must be equal or greater (not less than) to 0. This just means "the image can't be pushed off the top", which "less than" would allow it to be. (For example, if the image is pushed off the top by -40 points, that's still "less than 20").
The image has to be allowed to be vertically compressed. There is a property for "Vertical Compression Resistance" that was 250, and is now 249. By setting it to 249, we're saying "If something has to give way, vertically, this object can be compressed." Since we defined an aspect ratio constraint, if it does get compressed vertically, it'll be reduced horizontally by a proportionate amount so as to maintain the proportions of the logo.
To prevent the text fields from overlapping, their relationships are set to "equal or greater than". Same for the Username text field to the label.
The challenge was in defining the relationship between Password and the Create Password button at the bottom. I added a constraint that says their vertical distance must be greater than or equal to 20. This has a priority of 1000 (by default), so at all times, you get 20pt or greater between those two. Without this, your password field and your button overlap.
While step 5's constraint solves the overlap problem, it creates a new one in portrait orientation, where the password is now 20pt from the button, instead of being lovely white space. To fix that, we add a second constraint between the password field and the button, and specify that the vertical distance is to be 228pt between them both. Now that creates a constraint conflict because you now have two constraints that are both trying to define the vertical relationship between the button and the text field. The 20-pt one is required, it has to be there. But the other one is just a "nice to have, if we can fit it".
So you set the priority of the new one (the 228pt) to be low, such as a Priority of 250. Then the layout engine will use the required one (must be 20 pt or greater) and then it sees the other one ("make them 228") and it tries to do that. If it can't, such as in landscape, then it doesn't do it and doesn't complain, because you have the other constraint already that provides positioning information. If you're in portrait and you have enough space such that it can also apply the low priority constraint, then it'll do that too, and your portrait layout now gets a bigger gap between top and bottom.
When testing these layouts, use the Assist Editor in Preview split-screen mode so you can see the affects of your changes without needing to run the simulator. Here's a guide on that.
Sounds like you're using an equality constraint, such as "the distance between lastInput.bottom and footer.top equals 20". Instead, try an inequality operator, such as "the distance between lastInput.bottom and footer.top is equal or less than 20".
The attributes inspector for a constraint can let you change an equality to an inequality. Alternatively, you can double-click the constraint line (the UI in the storyboard editor) to get a quick pop-up for that.

Two NSTextFields with interdependent widths in autolayout

I’m trying to put together what seems to be a simple case of two NSTextFields with dynamic width and fixed spacing in between. I cannot figure out an effective way to do so though.
I’m looking to get something like this:
The blue boxes are the NSTextFields. When more text is entered into one, it should grow and thus make the other one shrink, maintaining the lead space, trailing space and the spacing in between the fields. The first one should take the priority if both of the fields have too much text. Each field will also clearly have a maximum and a minimum possible width it can reach.
How would I go around handling this, preferably utilising IB autolayout as much as possible?
It seems to me that all of constraints you mentioned directly translate into interface builder --
First view has width >= something.
First view has width <= something
Same for Second view.
Space between views is fixed.
Second view wants to be as small as possible (have its width at 0) but this has lower lower priority than the previous constraints and lower priority than inner content size constraints.
The code I had to add to my view controller, after applying the constraints as per the ilya’s answer:
In controlTextDidChange (_controlWidthConstraint refers to the fixed width constraint of the input; it’s probably 0 by default for the second input):
// Get the new width that fits
float oldWidth = textControl.frame.size.width;
[input sizeToFit];
float controlWidth = textControl.frame.size.width;
// Don’t let the sizeToFit method modify the frame though
NSRect controlRect = textControl.frame;
controlRect.size.width = oldWidth;
textControl.frame = controlRect;
_controlWidthConstraint.constant = controlWidth;
The key lies in invalidating the intrinsicContentSize for the text field when text is input.
You can check a sample project here, to get you on the right track.

Zedgraph textobj X location depends on text length?

I have a Zedgraph textobj which I want to place always in the same x, y position (ASP.NET image). I noticed that the text doesn't always show in the same starting x position. It shifts depending on the text's length. I tried to have the text to have the same length by padding it with spaces. It helped a little but the result is not always consistent. I am using PaneFraction for coordType.
What's the proper method to have a piece of text to always show in the same x position. I am using textobj as a title because the native title property always shows up centered and I need my title be left aligned to the graph.
No, it does not depend on text lenght, however...
It depends on various other things:
Horizontal and vertical align of the text box (see: Location )
Current size of the pane. The font size is scaled dynamically to fit the changing size of the chart.
Counting proper positions to have TextObj (or any other object) always at the same place is quite hard. So you need avoid as much as you can any numbers/fractions in your location coordinates. ZedGraph sometimes calculates the true position in quite odd way then.
You haven't provided any code, so it's hard to tell if and where you made the mistake (if any). But, if I were you, I would do something like that:
TextObj fakeTitle = new TextObj("some title\n ", 0.0, 0.0); // I'm using \n to have additional line - this would give me some space, margin.
fakeTitle.Location.CoordinateFrame = CoordType.ChartFraction;
fakeTitle.Location.AlignH = AlignH.Left; // Left align - that's what you need
fakeTitle.Location.AlignV = AlignV.Bottom; // Bottom - it means, that left bottom corner of your object would be located at the left top corner of the chart (point (0,0))
fakeTitle.FontSpec.Border.IsVisible = false; // Disable the border
fakeTitle.FontSpec.Fill.IsVisible = false; // ... and the fill. You don't need it.
zg1.MasterPane[0].GraphObjList.Add(fakeTitle);
I'm using ChartFraction coordinates instead of PaneFraction (as drharris suggests) coordinates to have the title nicely aligned with the left border of the chart. Otherwise it would be flushed totally to the left side (no margin etc...) - it looks better this way.
But make sure you didn't set too big font size - it could be clipped at the top
Are you using this constructor?
TextObj(text, x, y, coordType, alignH, alignV)
If not, then be sure you're setting alignH to AlignH.Left and alignV to AlignV.Top. Then X and Y should be 0, 0. PaneFraction for the coordType should be the correct option here, unless I'm missing your intent.
Alternatively, you can simply download Zedgraph code, edit it to Left-align the title (or even better, provide an option for this, which should have been done originally), and then use it in production. Beauty of open source.