sentry-cocoa
Eloquent
sentry-cocoa | Eloquent | |
---|---|---|
2 | 5 | |
768 | 111 | |
1.0% | - | |
9.7 | 0.0 | |
4 days ago | almost 2 years ago | |
Objective-C | Objective-C | |
MIT License | BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
sentry-cocoa
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Apple Watch Crash Reporting
Won’t happen until Apple implements exception handling in WatchOS. This issue for Sentry contains a lot of good info on the matter if you’re interested in read more: https://github.com/getsentry/sentry-cocoa/issues/406
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Random crashes in SwiftUI app?
Is this the message that you've been receiving on Sentry? I have experienced the same. There is an ongoing issue related to this specific message as mentioned here - App hang leads to falsely reported OOM. More details about OOM
Eloquent
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I feel connected to Christianity despite being Muslim my whole life
If you're in the US or some other equally free nation, then you can go straight for the Bible. I would hop on Blue Letter Bible for starters. If you decide to go into in-depth study, theWord and e-Sword would be what I would spring for next. Note that those work on Windows - if you're on a Mac, Eloquent should work - I've never used it, but it looks nice. And if you're a Linux user, Xiphos should have you covered.
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Asking for Resources to Learn
The SWORD Project. Different than e-Sword. While not a piece of software per se, the SWORD Project is yet another massive library of study materials. One of the things that stands out about the SWORD Project is that it has a free NASB module available. You usually have to buy the NASB, but the SWORD Project managed to get permission to redistribute it for free. There's many programs available that can use SWORD modules - my personal favorite is [Xiphos](). It is available for Windows and Linux (no compatibility software needed). If you're on macOS, you can try Eloquent - I've never used it, but it looks nice.
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I am looking for a Bible which is a literal translation (preferably NASB1995, but I'm open to suggestions) and has good footnotes regarding textual variation. Any suggestions?
All this stuff is designed for Windows, but if you're using macOS or Linux, you can use try using compatibility software to make it work. I, personally, have had good success with theWord on Linux by using Wine (a Windows compatibility layer), and e-Sword appears to work on Linux using Wine, too. Xiphos is available as a Linux application, and if you're on Mac, Eloquent should work as a substitute for Xiphos - I've never used it, but it uses the same modules as Xiphos, and it looks nice.
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Help. I have recently joined bible study in our church amd I realized something...
I would highly recommend getting some free Bible software. You can download a whopping load of Bible translations, sort through them until you find one you really like, then use the others as a fallback for if you run into confusion. As for Bible software recommendations, theWord is AMAZING, e-Sword is pretty good, and Xiphos will work if you're a Linux user. If you're on macOS, you might try Eloquent - I've not used it, but it looks pretty nice. If you're on mobile, you could try Bishop (works on Android and iOS).
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I just had breakfast with an old friend of mine, the father of a childhood friend. He happens to be a pastor and I came to him seeking guidance. With his help I have accepted Jesus into my heart. What can I do to strengthen this connection to Jesus and God?
Thirdly, if you don't have one already, get a Bible. You don't have to spend an arm and a leg to get some fancy leather-covered tome of onion paper. There's tons of free Bible software out there that have extraordinary amounts of study materials, everything from Bible translations, to original Hebrew and Greek texts (which come in real handy sometimes), daily devotionals, books, dictionaries, etc., etc. I personally use Bible software exclusively for my Bible reading and study. If you're a Windows user, theWord is probably your best bet. I would also install e-Sword, since it has some study materials that theWord doesn't have. If you're a Mac user, you can try Eloquent - I've personally never used it, but it looks pretty nice. You can also use e-Sword on macOS, but the Mac version of e-Sword costs $10. If you're using Linux, Xiphos is a great option. I personally use it. And if you're a mobile device or a Chromebook (or anything else, for that matter), Blue Letter Bible is amazing. It has mobile apps for Android and iOS, and a website for everything else.
What are some alternatives?
plcrashreporter - Reliable, open-source crash reporting for iOS, macOS and tvOS
Strongbox - A KeePass/Password Safe Client for iOS and OS X
CocoaLumberjack - A fast & simple, yet powerful & flexible logging framework for macOS, iOS, tvOS and watchOS
ios-crash-dump-analysis-book - iOS Crash Dump Analysis Book
nshipster.com - A journal of the overlooked bits in Objective-C, Swift, and Cocoa.
Official-Kodi-Remote-iOS - Full-featured remote control for XBMC Media Center. It features library browsing, now playing informations and a direct remote control.
Bugsnag - BugSnag error monitoring & exception reporter for iOS, macOS, tvOS and watchOS
Examples_Cocoa - Shows how to use macOS AppKit Cocoa controls without StoryBoard only by programming code (objective-c)
sentry-telegram - Plugin for Sentry which allows sending notification via Telegram messenger.
sentry-laravel - The official Laravel SDK for Sentry (sentry.io)
unity - Unity SDK UPM package
montereyblocker - Block macOS Monterey installer app from launching on macOS Big Sur or Catalina.