Given that I sort of led the charge in comments on your question, I feel a particular obligation to post an answer.
As it currently stands, I still think your question is in bad shape and could use some repair. I'll come back to this at the end of this post, but first, I want to address some of the initial problems with your question.
First and foremost, you need to be as specific and as crystal clear as possible. There are multiple reasons for this.
- Being as clear as possible helps potential answerers understand the exact issue. This helps them formulate the most helpful answer.
- Don't include unnecessary details. In this specific question, you're asking about an issue with Xcode 6.3, but you include as much information about Xcode 6.2 in your answer. Importantly, in its original form, your question didn't even make it clear which results (6.3 or 6.2) you expected to be correct.
- Don't overrely on pictures. I like pictures. I use them often in my answers, and on occassion, I've even asked people to include them in their question. Sometimes a picture is worth a thousand words. But it's important that you explain your problem as best you can in plain-text for several reasons (primary among these being search results).
But being as clear as possible needs some elaboration. It took me several back and forth comments before you were eventually encouraged to do some more research to narrow the problem down more specifically. Without these details, your question is unclear and unanswerable. If you had these details from the beginning, your question may still be unanswerable (it's probably an Xcode bug--6.3 is beta after all), but it would have been far more clear and far more focused.
A good rule of thumb? Don't post your problem as soon as you run into it. Ever since I adopted a personal rule of 72 hours between encountering a problem and posting a question to Stack Overflow, I've pretty much only asked questions which were well-received. If you've put 72 hours of research/sleeping on it/shower-brain-storming into the question, it should be pretty hard for it to be a bad question.
Now, as for your current question in its current form...
Here's the problem, it's not to the point and not specific enough. At this point you've done enough research to narrow the problem down to something very, very specific. If you were to write the question from scratch right now, it'd probably be a pretty good question. But instead, you've just tried to tack those details down at the bottom of what started off as a very bad question with no where near enough detail.
I recommend rewriting your question from scratch.
What's the core problem? Xcode debugger does not show NSData
properties
Now then... what's the most minimal example to recreate this error? Give me the simplest example of code that reproduces this error. Set up your own test project. If you convert a string to an NSData
object using dataWithEncoding:
, does the debugger still have a problem?
So a good question has 3 properties.
- A very clear problem statement
- A very clear description of the actual results and what the expected results should be
- The shortest and simplest code snippet that will reproduce the error that potential answerers can copy into their IDE to try duplicating the problem.