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I hope to migrate one of my windows app to mac.

As we know, on vista/win7, there are public data directories that one app can add, save and delete data files without RAC permission.

Are there same directories on Mac/Cocoa?

or

I can store the data to any directory without any problem and any permission?

Welcome any comment

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    Make sure you don't hard code the paths that you do use, use the APIs to locate them. For example, this will return an array containing the application support folder path: NSSearchPathForDirectoriesInDomains(NSApplicationSupportDirectory, NSUserDomainMask, YES) Aug 26, 2011 at 3:06
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    Also, NSFileManager has an equivalent method that returns an NSURL object (increasingly the way forward for modern file-system access). It also does away with the array, which nobody really used, so it's slightly easier. Aug 26, 2011 at 7:33
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    If you develop for the Mac, you should read the HIG. It also mentions this.
    – user142019
    Aug 26, 2011 at 7:41

2 Answers 2

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These are the 3 you can write to:

~/Library/Application Support/app-identifier

~/Library/app-identifier

~/Library/Caches/app-identifier

(replace app-identifer with your app identifier)

More info here under "File-System Usage Requirements for the Mac App Store"

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You can, by default, unless you enable sand-boxing, write to any directory the user has access to. Generally though, Cocoa apps store data in the user's home directory in ~/Library/Application Support/<your-app-name>

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    +1 as I can't stand apps that store it in the documents directory (like Microsoft Office and Autodesk Maya).
    – user142019
    Aug 26, 2011 at 7:40
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    The HIG mentions specifically that the Documents folder is only for files created by the user. Any files your application implicitly creates (including, but by no means limited to, the database for a “shoebox” [iPhoto/iTunes-style] app) should go somewhere in Library. The HIG gives more specific guidance on this and many other topics. Aug 26, 2011 at 7:48

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