![]() And I am on the latest Ventura and Xcode on a new-ish M1 MacBook Proįirst, the Assistant scrolls to some random part of the file and jumps back to that point after a minute. ![]() Yes, I tried it all, and nuking the derived data folders and reinstalling Xcode has not helped. Even better, when I pick a header file to work on, the Assistant shows me it’s matching implementation file.īut recently the Assistant has gone haywire. And when I switch to another code file, the assistant helpfully display’s its header. I can glance to the right to see the declarations that I am implementing, and can change both declaration and definition directly without opening or changing contexts. So for example if I am working on service.cpp, the assistant displays its header service.h. This is an editor panel to the right of the main editor where you are working that automatically (and somewhat magically) displays the counterpart to the file you are editing. ![]() One of the best features of Xcode for C++ programmers is its Assistant Editor. ![]()
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