Here's another cheap and easy way to do it, if all you want to do is customize the appearance of the main window before it appears:
Make your own subclass of NSWindowController, and connect it up as the delegate of the main window.
Implement windowDidUpdate as a hook to the window so you can set up the desired options, but also remove the window delegate so the function only gets called once. This is all the code you need to make that work:
// WindowController.swift
import Cocoa
class WindowController: NSWindowController, NSWindowDelegate {
func windowDidUpdate(notification: NSNotification!) {
if let window = notification.object as? NSWindow! {
window.titlebarAppearsTransparent = true
window.titleVisibility = NSWindowTitleVisibility.Hidden
window.styleMask |= NSFullSizeContentViewWindowMask
window.delegate = nil }
}
}
Actually, an even easier way to apply those appearance options to the window, is by using Interface Builder to add them as User Defined Runtime Attributes to the NSWindow object. You don't need to subclass NSWindowController or write any code at all. Just plug in these values to the window object via the Identity Inspector pane:
Keypath: titlebarAppearsTransparent, Type: Boolean, Value: Checked
Keypath: titleVisibility, Type: Number, Value: 1
Keypath: styleMask, Type: Number, Value: 32783
Of course, you can't specify individual bits of the styleMask, but it's easy enough to add them all together and get a single number to specify the style.
With Storyboard architecture, and the new powers given to NSViewController, there's not as much need to subclass NSWindowController anymore.