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Re: FHS compliance/Abstraction of NSBundle
From: |
Serg Stoyan |
Subject: |
Re: FHS compliance/Abstraction of NSBundle |
Date: |
Wed, 10 May 2006 13:58:25 +0300 |
-----Original Message-----
From: Lars Sonchocky-Helldorf <address@hidden>
To: Gregory John Casamento <address@hidden>
Date: Tue, 9 May 2006 18:14:07 +0200
Subject: Re: FHS compliance/Abstraction of NSBundle
>
> Am 09.05.2006 um 15:40 schrieb Gregory John Casamento:
>
> > Richard,
> >
> > My apologies for the top post, but the developers of the Yahoo beta
> > Mail application don't seem to realize that people sometimes want
> > to comment inside, or indeed below, a previous email. :)
> >
> > NSBundle does make some assumptions regarding where the resources
> > might be. For instance, it looks in the language directories for
> > different nibs. It also assumes that the app wrapper or bundle
> > has a Resources directory. What I'm proposing is to have a
> > further level of abstraction to allow for layouts which are vastly
> > different from the .app wrapper.
> >
> > Another possible application of this idea is on GNUstep for
> > Windows. If GNUstep is to be widely used on Windows, it would be
> > better if it conformed to something that Windows users are used to
> > on that platform. If you look at iTunes for Windows, you'll see
> > that it has an iTunes executable and an iTunes.Resources folder in
> > the folder where iTunes resides. While I realize that iTunes on
> > Windows is a Windows application, I think that this layout would be
> > a good thing to have for GNUstep apps because windows users will
> > be, understandably, confused when trying to invoke a GNUstep
> > application from Explorer especially if they have to navigate
> > within an app wrapper to do so. We need to provide them with
> > something that is familiar.
>
> Why not put the whole thing into a (uncompressed?) zip wrapped with
> some thin starter shell that does the application start up - much
> like those self extracting zips where the extracting functionality
> would be replaced by the starter shell. So we would get a single file
> executable.
>
> >
> > Later, GJC
> > --
> > Gregory John Casamento
> >
> > ----- Original Message ----
> > From: Richard Frith-Macdonald <address@hidden>
> > To: Gregory John Casamento <address@hidden>
> > Cc: GNUstep Developers <address@hidden>
> > Sent: Tuesday, May 9, 2006 4:12:37 AM
> > Subject: Re: FHS compliance/Abstraction of NSBundle
> >
> >
> > On 9 May 2006, at 03:21, Gregory John Casamento wrote:
> > >
> > > NSBundle Abstraction
> > > ====================
> > > Why should we be constrained to the .app wrapper?
> > >
> > > One of the things which I've done on the NibCompatibility branch is
> > > to abstract the model loading mechanism so that it has "loader"
> > > classes. Each loader handles a specific type of gui model (i.e.
> > > GSGormLoader for gorms, GSNibLoader for nibs and GSGModelLoader for
> > > gmodels). Each loader registers itself with a factory class so
> > > that the scheme is entirely open and can be easily extended. A
> > > similar scheme would be possible to implement for NSBundles.
> > >
> > > This would effectively decouple GNUstep from it's bundle structure
> > > and allow the use of any given bundle structure. This would
> > > allow, for instance, people to distribute apps as ".app" wrappers,
> > > or in other formats since how the bundle would find its resources
> > > would be abstracted into the bundle loading mechanism for each
> > > different type GNUstep could support.
> > >
> > > Please let me know what you think.
> >
> > I don't think it's a bad idea ... but it's probably one which is
> > 'waiting for an application'.
> >
> > I remember discussing this about a year ago, with reference to
> > monolithic distribution of an app on windows ... the idea was to put
> > all resources inside a single zip image linked in to the executable,
> > so that you could access the resources via NSBundle as normal, but
> > everything would actually be in a single executable which could be
> > copied and moved around very simply. The NSBundle would uncompress
> > data files into a temporary directory on demand. Anyway, that's one
> > possible application.
> >
> > However ... as decoupling from the underlying bundle structure is
> > precisely what NSBundle does anyway, there does not seem to be a need
> > for extra generic code to support it. You access things via NSBundle
> > rather than doing them directly, so subclassing NSBundle lets you use
> > any representation you like for the data stored in the bundle. If
> > people needed alternative storage formats they could easily support
> > them that way, so I guess nobody has really needed them (after all,
> > the default format is really simple).
> >
> > So ... if we have a concrete application that's reasonable important
> > to devote time to, it would be good to code an NSBundle subclass to
> > handle that application and add makefile extensions to package up
> > resources in the manner the new bundle expects. Handling a
> > compressed archive seems the obvious first choice.
> >
> >
> >
> > _______________________________________________
> > Gnustep-dev mailing list
> > address@hidden
> > http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/gnustep-dev
> > _______________________________________________
> > Gnustep-dev mailing list
> > address@hidden
> > http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/gnustep-dev
>
>
>
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>
- Re: FHS compliance/Abstraction of NSBundle, (continued)
- Re: FHS compliance/Abstraction of NSBundle, Helge Hess, 2006/05/10
- Re: FHS compliance/Abstraction of NSBundle, Hubert Chan, 2006/05/10
- Re: FHS compliance/Abstraction of NSBundle, Helge Hess, 2006/05/10
- Re: FHS compliance/Abstraction of NSBundle, Hubert Chan, 2006/05/10
- Re: FHS compliance/Abstraction of NSBundle, Helge Hess, 2006/05/10
Re: FHS compliance/Abstraction of NSBundle, Helge Hess, 2006/05/09
Re: FHS compliance/Abstraction of NSBundle, Richard Frith-Macdonald, 2006/05/09
Re: FHS compliance/Abstraction of NSBundle,
Serg Stoyan <=
Re: FHS compliance/Abstraction of NSBundle, Serg Stoyan, 2006/05/10
Re: FHS compliance/Abstraction of NSBundle, Serg Stoyan, 2006/05/10