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@hfhbd
hfhbd / CloudKit.swift
Created March 10, 2021 23:46
Apple CloudKit ServerSide API
/**
Copyright 2021 Philip Wedemann
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
@rmondello
rmondello / gist:b933231b1fcc83a7db0b
Last active April 5, 2024 07:10
Exporting (iCloud) Keychain and Safari credentials to a CSV file

Exporting (iCloud) Keychain and Safari credentials to a CSV file

Update (October 2021)

Exporting password + one-time code data from iCloud Keychain is now officially supported in macOS Monterey and Safari 15 (for Monterey, Big Sur, and Catalina). You can access it in the Password Manager’s “gear” icon (System Preferences > Passwords on Monterey, and Safari > Passwords everywhere else), or via the File > Export > Passwords... menu item). You shouldn't need to hack up your own exporter anymore.

Original, Obsolete Content (2014)

After my dad died, I wanted to be able to have access any of his online accounts going forward. My dad was a Safari user and used iCloud Keychain to sync his credentials across his devices. I don’t want to have to keep an OS X user account around just to access his accounts, so I wanted to export his credentials to a portable file.

@nicklockwood
nicklockwood / Hacking UIView Animation Blocks.md
Last active January 12, 2024 06:15
This article was originally written for objc.io issue 12, but didn't make the cut. It was intended to be read in the context of the other articles, so if you aren't familiar with concepts such as CALayer property animations and the role of actionForKey:, read the articles in that issue first.

Hacking UIView animation blocks for fun and profit

In this article, I'm going to explore a way that we can create views that implement custom Core Animation property animations in a natural way.

As we know, layers in iOS come in two flavours: Backing layers and hosted layers. The only difference between them is that the view acts as the layer delegate for its backing layer, but not for any hosted sublayers.

In order to implement the UIView transactional animation blocks, UIView disables all animations by default and then re-enables them individually as required. It does this using the actionForLayer:forKey: method.

Somewhat strangely, UIView doesn't enable animations for every property that CALayer does by default. A notable example is the layer.contents property, which is animatable by default for a hosted layer, but cannot be animated using a UIView animation block.

@BenedictC
BenedictC / gist:4246759
Created December 9, 2012 20:03
A marco for creating enums with values which can be logged (inspired by http://rentzsch.tumblr.com/post/37512716957/enum-nsstring and long train journey).
#define EMKStringableEnum(ENUM_NAME, ENUM_VALUES...) \
\
typedef enum { \
ENUM_VALUES \
} ENUM_NAME; \
\
\
\
static NSString * ENUM_NAME##ToString(int enumValue) { \
static NSString *enumDescription = @"" #ENUM_VALUES; \
@hezi
hezi / HZClassUsingEnum.h
Created July 12, 2012 14:06
Objective-C Enum-TO-NSString and Vice versa.
// Declare enums like so:
#define IMAGE_STATUS(XX) \
XX(kDOImageStatusOK, = 0) \
XX(kDOImageStatusCached, )\
XX(kDOImageStatusRetry, )
DECLARE_ENUM(DOImageStatus, IMAGE_STATUS)