In the Nav Services world one could specify kNavDontConfirmReplacement
as an option to create a NavDialogRef
that would not ask the user to confirm the replacement of a file when saving with a file name that already exists. How do I specify an equivalent behavior with the Cocoa NSSavePanel
?
3 Answers
Here's how it can be done:
- Add a delegate to handle NSSavePanel callbacks
- Override
- (NSString*)panel:(id)sender userEnteredFilename:(NSString*)filename confirmed:(BOOL)okFlag
in your delegate - In the delegate:
- If
okFlag
isfalse
, returnfilename
- Otherwise, retain
filename
as anNSString*
in your delegate - Return some unique string that is highly unlikely to be the name of an actual file
- If
- When
NSSavePanel
returns to your code, pull the value of filename from your delegate method, and discard whatever filenameNSSavePanel
told you (which should be your unique string).
Since userEnteredFilename:
is called by the OS before the confirm-replace check is made it gives you a chance to get what the user specified without letting the OS in on the secret. The unique string will assure that the confirm-replace dialog is not popped accidentally.
Gross but efficacious.
-
Beware that filename may contain slashes. Save panel’s default behavior seems to be to convert them to colons.– GeorgeJul 10, 2015 at 4:31
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This seems to go contrarty to the human interface guidelines not to break the users expectation. There must be a way to do this the correct ( ie less gross ) way. Very slick idea btw Jul 29, 2016 at 23:32
No, there is no easy way to do this with NSSavePanel. In theory you could extend NSSavePanel with a category and override certain private methods. I took a quick look though and there is nothing simple about it.
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Some discussion of doing that using overrides here: cocoadev.com/index.pl?DisableAlertBoxInNSSavePanel Dec 21, 2009 at 15:07
Your customers is going to expect the exact confirmation alert when faced with a NSSavePanel, so don't customize it.
I'm not sure what kind of customized confirm-overwrite dialog you are planning, but might I suggest you use a NSOpenPanel instead, and customize this dialog box with a "Create New File" button? (I believe you can do this via setAccessoryView API.)
For example, if you are asking your customer to choose a file to append new data to, the NSOpenPanel will work quite well; and if the customer want to save the new data to a new file (instead of appending to an existing file), the "Create New File" button is just an additional click.
- (BOOL)_overwriteExistingFileCheck:(id)arg1;
and/or- (BOOL)_shouldAlertForFileOverwrite:(id)arg1;
and returnNO
. Won't work for a sandboxed application, though.