

(In Qt, you cannot reliably use fonts, pixmaps, or render SVG content onto a QGraphicsScene on background threads. Then use your Expos shortcut to show all the. I cannot run the long-running tasks in background threads because they are doing things that must be done in a GUI thread. Alternative to existing solution, which is right clicking on the app icon in the Dock and clicking on the desired window: Enable Expos in System Preferences > Trackpad > App Expos (for trackpad shortcut) or System Preferences > Mission Control > Application windows (for keyboard shortcut). Right-Click (or two finger click) any folder on the Dock and you. If I put this code into a separate application it would cause major duplication, so I'd rather keep it the way it is. The MacOS Transformation Pack includes Mac themes, wallpapers, fonts, sounds, Dock, Launchpad, and much more. If youve got a folder on your Dock theres a number of ways you can have the dock display it. It is written in C++ (Qt), but solutions that target the native Cocoa library are fine. I have full control over the source to the application. The option must be able to be set by changing a property on the process or via a command line parameter. Is there a way to run an application sometimes without the application icon showing up on the dock? I can't edit the ist or anything because normally I want the dock icon.


Everything works great, except that for each child process I get another dock icon that pops in for a second or two and then disappears. However, for certain long-running tasks, it spawns additional processes of the same application that run in a "script mode," where I am controlling it from the parent process. I have an application that normally runs with a standard graphical interface.
