4

I thought this would be straight forward, but it looks like I was wrong. Basically, all I'm trying to do is keep the font from changing to the Apple default: Helvetica Regular 12pt.

I've made a subclass of NSDocument and in my implementation file I have the following method:

- (void)windowControllerDidLoadNib:(NSWindowController*)aController
{
    [super windowControllerDidLoadNib:aController];

    if(attrString)
    {
        [[textView textStorage] setAttributedString:attrString];
        [[textView textStorage] setFont:[NSFont fontWithName:@"Menlo Bold" size:24]];
    }

This method works all right when I open a file, but if I delete all of the text and then type again, the font resets to... Helvetica Regular 12pt... All I want is to keep the font and size as I specified it for the entire life of the program.

2
  • 1
    Why don't you set the font in the attributed string rather than the text view?
    – trojanfoe
    Jul 6, 2012 at 12:27
  • Because I'm a rookie and don't know what I'm doing. After a few more chapters of this book, I realize that does look kind of funny.
    – 425nesp
    Jul 20, 2012 at 2:52

1 Answer 1

1

You need to set the typing attributes of the text view to contain your font for the key NSFontAttributeName.

However, I would go a step further. If you know you NEVER want a certain font in your model (NSTextStorage -- the backing store for NSTextView), simply subclass NSTextStorage and override the attribute setters and getters. NSTextView gives the user access to font menus and copy/paste will still allow certain fonts in. The only way to truly guarantee it never enters your text view is to never allow it into the model.

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