The Phone/Camera/Plane Ticket: iPhone 12 Proįrom takeoff to landing, the most used device on this entire journey will be the iPhone. The only reason I replaced it in the last year was that I wanted to size up to accommodate the Magic Keyboard, although I still keep the older sleeve for when I'm travelling with just the Smart Keyboard Folio. I've owned a SleeveCase for over half a decade, and it continues to hold up exceptionally well. The particular backpack I am taking doesn't have any laptop padding (the 15" & 17" Kånken backpacks do, however), so a sleeve with ample padding provides extra assurance from any drops, jostles and other travel-related folly. I'm taking along the waxed canvas and grizzly leather SleeveCase from WaterField Designs to keep the iPad generously protected. Work, social media, and graphic design will be swapped out for with campfires, late nights, and BBQs! The Bag: Kånken Re-Wool Backpack from Fjällräven
#Spelltower document software#
The software section will cover some of the apps, shows, and content I like to prep ahead of this trip! The visit is all about seeing family, so the tech I am taking along with me is pretty minimal. As you might've guessed, this hardware part covers all the physical goods (the bags, cables, and tech) I will be taking along with me. I've broken this entry into two parts: the hardware and the software. With flights booked, the most important question becomes: What's inside my travel bag? The Physical Goods
It's been nearly two years to the day since my last flight, and I couldn't be more thrilled at the opportunity to fly again, be with family, and finally meet our now 1.5-year-old nephew for the very first time. But then… you know… COVID happened… still is happening! The most heartbreaking part was seeing trip after trip after trip cancelled, not for the flight itself, but because each cancellation represented the loss of a significant milestone, some that we would not experience again. Our 2020 itinerary included an April trip for a friend's wedding, a May flight to meet our newborn nephew, and an early fall flight to San Francisco for a weekend with friends (and yes, I was planning on doing an Infinite Loop/Apple Park Visitor Center swag run). The wheels of our Boeing 737 touched down at 11:23 that morning, and I didn't give it a second thought! After all, there was more travel to be had.
I was thinking, something really simple you could do is catch it outside and present a "pause" screen, then just hide it when the application enters foreground.The last time I took a flight was July 22, 2019. In situations where the app is about to suspend or go to the background, your method will be called before Corona's version, e.g.ĪpplicationWillResignActive: and applicationDidEnterBackground. There is one situation in which your version will be called before. In most cases, your class' version will be invoked after Corona's corresponding version of the UIApplicationDelegate method. Methods that Apple has deprecated will be ignored. Internal delegate will call your protocol's method if it is This protocol conforms to the UIApplicationDelegate protocol. You can intercept UIApplicationDelegate events via your implementation So my guess is that you have to implement it outside of the corona API.Īccording to the corona documents you can implement them in the delegate:
#Spelltower document simulator#
On the simulator, this occurs when the simulator was in the background and now is the foreground application. On the phone, this occurs if the application was suspendedīecause of a phone call. "applicationResume" occurs when the application resumes after a suspend.
#Spelltower document code#
You have code that depends on time, you should account for the time During suspension, no events (not evenĮnterFrame events) are sent to the application while suspended, so if In the simulator, this corresponds to the simulator "applicationSuspend" occurs when the device needs to suspend the application such as during a phone call or if the phone goes to sleepįrom inactivity. "applicationExit" occurs when the user quits the application. "applicationStart" occurs when the application is launched and all code So what you want to do is to add that code for this part. In normal objective c programming it means that applicationWillResignActive is called when the user double clicks on the home button.
I believe the reason is because the application is not considered as suspended.