>
> Cheers,
> Alexandre
>
>
>> On Oct 28, 2014, at 9:38 AM, Thierry Goubier <
[hidden email]> wrote:
>>
>> Le 28/10/2014 13:22, Alexandre Bergel a écrit :
>>> Why did you create a subclass of RTView? What is missing in RTView that you need to subclass it?
>>
>> I was trying to have a fixed shape as a background of normal shapes. So I tried to change the way fixed shapes were handled with a RTView subclass. Then I subclassed Canvas, Camera, TRMorph, and RTPopup, and...
>>
>> and then I gave up... :(
>>
>> Now, I have a better understanding of how Roassal works ;)
>>
>> Thierry
>>
>>>
>>> Cheers,
>>> Alexandre
>>>
>>>
>>>> On Oct 24, 2014, at 12:21 PM, Thierry Goubier <
[hidden email]> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> 2014-10-24 16:51 GMT+02:00 Peter Uhnák <
[hidden email]>:
>>>>> My point is that I want to do a board with multiple views. I saw that in the Roassal example pane.
>>>> If you mean what I think that's not actually Roassal, that is just regular images. You can always investigate the source code of Roassal>ExampleBrowser package/RTExampleBrowser/RTAbstractExample.
>>>>
>>>> I think it is a RTView with RTBimapShape(s) inside.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>> can you give an example? Does that mean all builders have a view: method (or is that renderIn:?). I'm interested because I'd like to mix builders.
>>>> The base class RTBuilder have both view: and renderIn:; if not specified the builder will create its own view.
>>>> I don't know if this is the intended way, but that's how I use it and it seems to work. :)
>>>> Look at RTComposerExample>>exampleClassAnalysis.
>>>>
>>>> Cool. I made a subclass of RTView for my needs, and this means I can use any builder on it :)
>>>>
>>>> Thierry
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Peter
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On Fri, Oct 24, 2014 at 4:38 PM, Thierry Goubier <
[hidden email]> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> 2014-10-24 16:14 GMT+02:00 Peter Uhnák <
[hidden email]>:
>>>> I don't believe you can add view to a view, however you can either use the same view in all methods (if you are using builders you can pass view to them, or use renderIn: aView method)
>>>>
>>>> Hi Peter,
>>>>
>>>> can you give an example? Does that mean all builders have a view: method (or is that renderIn:?). I'm interested because I'd like to mix builders.
>>>>
>>>> Thierry
>>>>
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