9

I didn't use storyboard and xib, just used only code. I would like to add "Edit" Menu Programmatically. My Questions are

1) How to show "Edit" Menu / What codes need to input at comment Question 1)?

2) There are any actions provided from swift like copy & paste?

class TestManager: NSObject {

// ....
    override init() {
        let editMenuItems = [
            NSMenuItem(title: "Cut", action: nil(/* Question 2) */), keyEquivalent: ""),
            NSMenuItem(title: "Copy", action: nil, keyEquivalent: ""),
            NSMenuItem(title: "Paste", action: nil, keyEquivalent: ""),
        ]

        for editMenuItem in editMenuItems {
            self.editMenu.addItem(editMenuItem)
        }

        // Qustion 1) .. show "Edit" Menu
    }
}
4
  • Would you please state why you want to make an app withtout mainmenu if you actually need it?
    – qwerty_so
    Feb 28, 2015 at 15:15
  • 4
    The reason why I use custom code is 1) What I want to make is similar to github.com/devxoul/allkdic (Custom Code) 2) If you know how to code a user interface, then you know what happens under the hood, whereas the same is not necessarily true of NIBs and Storyboards.
    – Astin
    Mar 8, 2015 at 15:54
  • That, honestly, does not make any sense at all. If you need a menu (and you state that you do need it) then use the MainMenu as being placed in the Info.plist.
    – qwerty_so
    Mar 8, 2015 at 19:42
  • 9
    I don't quite understand all the negatives. It's a perfectly reasonable question and I also want to know the answer also. I'm wanting to insert and append items. i.e. not static but dynamic. This is for a launcher application where apps are downloaded and launched from a dynamic menu.
    – hookenz
    Nov 30, 2015 at 20:09

3 Answers 3

6

You don't show where self.editMenu comes from.

In any case, you need to obtain the mainMenu from the NSApplication instance and add a menu item to that which has your menu as its submenu. So, something like:

var editMenuItem = NSMenuItem()
editMenuItem.title = "Edit"
var mainMenu = NSMenu()
mainMenu.addItem(editMenuItem)
mainMenu.setSubmenu(self.editMenu, forItem:editMenuItem)
NSApplication.sharedApplication().mainMenu = mainMenu

I don't work in Swift, so there are probably some mistakes in there.

As to what action selector to use for Edit menu items, the easiest thing for you to do is to create a main menu NIB just to examine it. Look at the action selectors used for the menu items of the ready-made Edit menu. You'll find that the Copy item uses the copy: selector, for example. That can be represented in Swift as just a string, "copy:".

12
  • Thanks for the answer. I don't have enough reputation. I will try to do this way and comment again. Thank you, Ken.
    – Astin
    Mar 2, 2015 at 7:59
  • I did like this, gist.github.com/AstinCHOI/9791f4b0ab941a2be6da. but It didn't work. Thanks for your help.
    – Astin
    Mar 3, 2015 at 5:52
  • You left out the mainMenu?.addItem(editMenuItem) statement. Mar 3, 2015 at 5:55
  • The current gist has it commented out. Also, check that mainMenu is not nil. Mar 3, 2015 at 6:32
  • As you expected, mainMenu is nil T.T
    – Astin
    Mar 3, 2015 at 6:42
4

https://developer.apple.com/library/content/documentation/Cocoa/Conceptual/MenuList/Articles/EnablingMenuItems.html

Automatic Menu Enabling

  • If the menu item’s target is not set (that is, if it is nil—typically if the menu item is connected to First Responder) and the NSMenu object is not a contextual menu, then NSMenu uses the responder chain (described in The Responder Chain) to determine the target. If there is no object in the responder chain that implements the item’s action, the item is disabled. If there is an object in the responder chain that implements the item’s action, NSMenu then checks to see if that object implements the validateMenuItem: or validateUserInterfaceItem: method. If it does not, then the menu item is enabled. If it does, then the enabled status of the menu item is determined by the return value of the method.

So, in order to achieve Automatic Menu Enabling for standard system menu items we have to specify correct action without setting target.

let menu = NSMenu(...)
menu.addItem(withTitle: "Quit \(applicationName)",
             action: #selector(NSApplication.terminate(_:)), keyEquivalent: "q")
menu.addItem(withTitle: "Select All",
             action: #selector(NSText.selectAll(_:)), keyEquivalent: "a")
menu.addItem(withTitle: "Copy",
             action: #selector(NSText.copy(_:)), keyEquivalent: "c")
1

I found the answers here were generally in the right direction but something was missing, so I'll add my complete solution. In my case I wanted to add a "Debug" menu only for development.

func addDebugMenu() {
    let debugMenu = NSMenuItem(title: "Debug", action: nil, keyEquivalent: "")
    debugMenu.submenu = NSMenu(title: "Debug")
    debugMenu.submenu?.addItem(withTitle: "Load saved data", action: #selector(self.loadDataFromFile(_:)), keyEquivalent: "")
    NSApplication.shared.mainMenu?.addItem(debugMenu)
}

@objc func loadDataFromFile(_ sender: Any) {
    print("load it")
}

For the complete solution, call it like this for development-only:

#if DEBUG
addDebugMenu()
#endif

My environment is: Xcode 12.3, macOS 10.15.7, Swift 5.3.2

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