After testing the Windows install I set 1.2.1 as the default version of Java TreeView. I believe there are very few if any third party plugins, but will try to find some time document how to get them working with the new app bundle layout next weekend.
I set 1.2.1 as the default version of Java TreeView. I believe there are very few if any third party plugins, but will try to find some time document how to get them working with the new app bundle layout next weekend.
Hi Richard, I believe this issue was caused by AppTranslocation, aka Gatekeeper path randomisation. I have addressed this issue by moving the plugins and coordinates inside of the app bundle. This means that in order to add plugins or coordiantes files you will need to use the Terminal app, but should make JTV easier to use for most people. I'll probably have time to work on the documentation (and general cleanup) the weekend of Oct 5. If you have time, could you try out the newest version? http...
Hi Richard, Could you describe the issue a little more fully? 1. Which distribution of Java TreeView are you using, and how are you launching it? 2. What is an example location where you cannot open files? I seem to be able to open files in my Desktop folder on Somoma, Mac OSX 14.6.1 after fixing the bundle launcher. I am prompted to grant Java access when I navigate to that folder, but otherwise it works. There is an additional issue related to finding plugins after AppTranslocation, but after I...
The following may help, I will see if I can find a Big Sur machine to test on: https://support.apple.com/guide/mac-help/control-access-to-files-and-folders-on-mac-mchld5a35146/mac
This seems very similar to the following issue reported a couple weeks back: https://sourceforge.net/p/jtreeview/bugs/73/ Are you able to see files in your main user folder?
How to run TreeView-1.1.6r4-osx on macOS Catalina?
Closing since I believe it is fixed in 1.2.0.