I need to open a NSSavePanel with the users Library folder as destination folder. Normally I would do this by entering "~/Library/" in [NSSavePanel beginSheetForDirectory].

This works fine as long as the application is not sandboxed. For sandboxed applications this will result in the NSSavePanel trying to access a folder inside the applications document "box".

I can not refer to "/users/username/Library/" as I do not know the users "username" at runtime. So how do I link to this path in cocoa?

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up vote 1 down vote accepted

Not sure if this will work on a sandboxed application but this is how I do it right now. This will return /User/TheirUserName

-(NSString *)homeDirectory
{
    return NSHomeDirectory();
}
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Works like a charm! Just what I needed, thank you! – Øystein Nov 4 '11 at 7:25
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It depends what you are trying to achieve.

  • If the behavior is required by your application, then you can request a temporary exception entitlement when submitting the application to the Mac App Store. But sooner or later, you will have to find a solution to remove this exception.
  • If you want to access data that were previously stored in the ~/Library/ folder, you can define a migration strategy to move back the data into the sandbox.
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I do not need any elevated entitlements to achive this. It is enough to have read/write on the file system, as I use a save dialog to do the actual saving. I have run a proof of concept on this and know that works. What I need the user to do, is to save some files in this folder. That is why I need the actual folder and not just access to it's content. So it is no good to bring the data into my sandbox either. So I need some kind of way to read the users "username" to be able to build up the path to his Library folder, like: "~/user/[username]/Library/ – Øystein Nov 4 '11 at 7:19
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I'm not sure how sandboxing fits in with this, but you can find the user's library directory using:

NSArray* paths = NSSearchPathForDirectoriesInDomains( NSLibraryDirectory, NSUserDomainMask, YES );
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