Difference between revisions of "NSBundle"
(Introduction in layman's terms and note GS extensions) |
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NSBundle is mostly used to find the executable code for a given bundle (and vice versa), to choose appropriate [[localization]]s, and to locate other resources in a bundle's directory. Currently GNUstep defines two methods in addition to those from OpenStep: <tt>bundleForLibrary</tt> and <tt>pathForLibraryResource</tt>. However, these two extensions are experimental and might change. | NSBundle is mostly used to find the executable code for a given bundle (and vice versa), to choose appropriate [[localization]]s, and to locate other resources in a bundle's directory. Currently GNUstep defines two methods in addition to those from OpenStep: <tt>bundleForLibrary</tt> and <tt>pathForLibraryResource</tt>. However, these two extensions are experimental and might change. | ||
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+ | NSBundle inherits from [[NSObject]] and is defined in <tt>Foundation/NSBundle.h</tt>. | ||
[[Category:Foundation]] | [[Category:Foundation]] |
Revision as of 05:00, 9 April 2007
NSBundle is a class in Foundation for the manipulation of bundles. Bundles are specialized directories that collect related resources for an application or framework (or even an ordinary file) and present them to a user as a single, opaque file. Common resources are images, NIB or GORM interface files, localizations, and executable binaries.
NSBundle is mostly used to find the executable code for a given bundle (and vice versa), to choose appropriate localizations, and to locate other resources in a bundle's directory. Currently GNUstep defines two methods in addition to those from OpenStep: bundleForLibrary and pathForLibraryResource. However, these two extensions are experimental and might change.
NSBundle inherits from NSObject and is defined in Foundation/NSBundle.h.