- #MICROSOFT ONENOTE FOR MAC 10.7 MAC OS X#
- #MICROSOFT ONENOTE FOR MAC 10.7 FULL#
- #MICROSOFT ONENOTE FOR MAC 10.7 PRO#
- #MICROSOFT ONENOTE FOR MAC 10.7 MAC#
#MICROSOFT ONENOTE FOR MAC 10.7 FULL#
In Yosemite Apple moved the traffic light buttons for close, minimise and full screen mode onto the same level so that the height of the window title bar could be cut. For example, you can hide the Dock, or move it to the side, or hide the menus at the top of the screen. There are also various design touches that make the most of a small display.
#MICROSOFT ONENOTE FOR MAC 10.7 MAC#
Dark Mode makes the Mac interface a little more comfortable to use at night or in a dark editing studio, for example. But as of Mojave you can overhaul the whole interface to use a darker, more muted colour scheme systemwide. Previously macOS only allowed you to darken the menu bar at the top of the screen as well as the drop down menus that appear from that, and the Dock. I'm starting to wonder if I have a hardware problem somewhere or if I should downgrade to Snow Leopard and XCode 3.Other features include a Dark Mode that was introduced in Mojave (shown above). If anyone has any other ideas, I'm open to trying them. I've now noticed that if I hit "Continue" in the Internal Error crash dialog, about 15 times, XCode becomes usable to the point of exploring the menus, etc., and only seems to bring up the Internal Error crash dialog again if I try to quit. The version of XCode that gets installed is XCode 4.2.1 Build 4D502, if that matters.
The Problem Details in the Problem Report when XCode crashes appears to be basically the same as the Problem Details reported above. However, three additional bits of information: Everything seemed to be going fine, but when I launched XCode, it immediately crashed again :-( I then emptied the trash and reinstalled XCode. Sudo /Developer-old-1/Library/uninstall-devtools -mode=allĪt this point, the /Developer, /Developer-old, and /Developer-old-1 folders were deleted. Sudo /Developer-old/Library/uninstall-devtools -mode=all Sudo /Developer/Library/uninstall-devtools -mode=all Here's what I typed in Terminal: sudo tmutil disablelocal I tried the approach referenced by Michael Dautermann below, but it didn't work. Path: /Developer/Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/MacOS/Xcodeīuild Info: IDEApplication-834000000000000~2 UPDTE-1: Here are the first lines from the Problem Details and System Configuration report (in general it seems most of these I have looked at for this problem seem to be talking about the IDE Navigator Log): Process: Xcode
I bought this system so I can program in Xcode. Sometimes I can get as far as clicking on a menu item in XCode (while the crash message is being displayed), but that's it.Įverything else seems to work perfect on this machine, so I doubt it's the hardware. Since then, I've tried many things to try to correct the problem: rebooting, reinstalling, redownloading and reinstalling, deleting and reinstalling, deleting iTunes and reinstalling (an early Stack Overflow answer suggested this), and more. Then, the next day I launched Xcode to start using it and it crashed immediately upon launch. At first, Xcode worked fine (only launched to see if it worked). I've also downloaded and installed Xcode 4.2.1 from the App Store.
I've only installed OmniOutlner Pro, Textmate, and Ruby RVM.
#MICROSOFT ONENOTE FOR MAC 10.7 MAC OS X#
It has a fresh install of Mac OS X Lion 10.7.2.
#MICROSOFT ONENOTE FOR MAC 10.7 PRO#
It's a used Mac Pro (2x2GHz Dual-Core Xeon with 2GB RAM). This week I bought my first Mac in about 10 years (yeah!).