Mar 95 Tips
Volume Number: 11
Issue Number: 3
Column Tag: Tips & Tidbits
Tips & Tidbits
By Scott T Boyd, Editor
Note: Source code files accompanying article are located on MacTech CD-ROM or
source code disks.
TIP OF THE MONTH
Set Breakpoints In ROM
About a year ago I wrote a little control panel called AV Turbo ROM. What it does
is set an undocumented bit in PRAM that the ROMs of Power Macs and AV class
machines (840AV and 660AV) check upon restart. If the bit is set, the ROM is copied
down into RAM.
While this may or may not speed up things a little (I’ve listened to several people
debate this issue), that’s not why I wrote it. I wrote it because now that the ROM code
is in RAM, I can set breakpoints in “ROM” code. This is very handy when debugging or
for those times when you are wondering, “how does that work?”
There are a few gotchas to be aware of:
1) Now that the ROM is in RAM, RAM Doubler from Connectix and The Debugger from
Jasik Designs won’t work because they expect the ROM code to be where it’s
supposed to be. Sorry about that, but remember that AV Turbo ROM is simply a
tool to be used in special circumstances, and it’s quite reasonable to expect
system products of their nature to make certain assumptions about the ROM.
2) Restarting on a PowerMac sometimes doesn’t work. Here’s the workaround - just
hit the reset button again; it usually works the second time.
3) Since the ROM can be written to now, errant code could trash things. It’s too bad
that The Debugger can’t help out with it’s memory protection technology, but
sometimes it’s worth making the tradeoff.
I’ve been running this for a year and haven’t had any problems, just lots of fun
walking through the ROMs. AV Turbo ROM is available on most online services. Here’s
one place to get it:
ftp://freebsd.cdrom.com:/.13/mac/umich/system.extensions/cdev/avturborom1.0.
cpt.hqx
Another Quick Tip
Do you use TMON Pro? Do you know about trap record? If not, find out. It’s a very
useful debugging tool if you are debugging code other than your own.
- Steve Kiene, mindvision@mindvision.com
Copy Bits Quicker
If you are using custom color palettes in combination with lots of calls to CopyBits, you
can speed up your graphics routines by making sure that the ctSeed of both the source
and destination PixMap’s color tables are the same.
If the ctSeed values are different, QuickDraw will map each color in the source
color table to colors in the destination color table, slowing down the CopyBits
operation. If the ctSeed values are the same, QuickDraw will assume that both
PixMaps use the same color table, and it will simply copy the bits directly. This has
the disadvantage that if the palettes are completely different, you will end up with the
wrong colors in the destination.
- Jeremy Vineyard, jeremyv@farallon.com
Hey, Finder, Pay Attention!
I have run into several things which change a file’s creator, but the finder doesn’t
update the file’s icon right away. The user often has to close and reopen the Finder
window to get the proper icons to appear. If your application needs to fiddle with a
file’s creator type or other attributes, you can solve the above problem by changing
the ioDrMdDat field of your file’s parent directory. This “tricks” the Finder into
updating the window.
void ForceFinderToUpdateFileIcon(
FSSpecPtr theFile)
{
CInfoPBRec tempPB;
if(theFile != 0L)
{
tempPB.dirInfo.ioNamePtr = 0L;
tempPB.dirInfo.ioVRefNum=theFile->vRefNum;
tempPB.dirInfo.ioFDirIndex = -1;
tempPB.dirInfo.ioDrDirID = theFile->parID;
if(PBGetCatInfoSync(&tempPB) == noErr)
{
tempPB.dirInfo.ioDrMdDat = LMGetTime();
tempPB.dirInfo.ioDrDirID = theFile->parID;
PBSetCatInfoSync(&tempPB);
}
}
}
- Craig Marciniak
TemplarDev@aol.com
Hot Tip for Hot Keys
One of the things I appreciate in applications is the ability to select buttons with
keystrokes (the keyboard shortcut is known as a hotkey). The following code example
adds hotkey functionality to alert dialogs and can be easily added to modal dialogs. The
next time you use an alert, add AlertKeyProc to the function and you will have instant
hotkey functionality. Simply change
CautionAlert(ALERT_ID, NIL)
to
CautionAlert(SAVE_ALERT_ID, AlertKeyProc)
#include
#define kEnterKey 3
#define kReturnKey 13
#define kEscapeKey 27
pascal Boolean AlertKeyProc(DialogPtr theDialog,
EventRecord *e, short *itemHit)
{
char theChar;
short num, i, iType;
Handle iHandle;
Rect iRect;
Str255 iText;
long finalTicks;
switch( e->what )
{
case keyDown:
case autoKey:
theChar = (e->message & charCodeMask);
if(theChar == kReturnKey || theChar == kEnterKey)
{
*itemHit = 1;
return( TRUE );
}
else if(theChar == kEscapeKey)
{
*itemHit = 2;
return( TRUE );
}
else
{
num = CountDITL( theDialog );
for(i=0; i
{
GetDItem(theDialog, i, &iType, &iHandle, &iRect);
if(iType == ctrlItem + btnCtrl)
{// If the button is a push button
GetCTitle((ControlHandle )iHandle, iText);
if(theChar == iText[1] ||
theChar == tolower(iText[1]))
{
*itemHit = i;
HiliteControl((ControlHandle )iHandle, 1);
return( TRUE );
}
}
}
}
break;
}
return( FALSE );
}
- Jeff Beeghly, jbeeghly@u.washington.edu