Steve Moseley

@moseley
370 Followers
277 Following
1.5K Posts
A man full of pizza, coffee, and the love of a few red heads.
@jlam This thread… wow. I’m so sorry. (Sorry for the late reply - have been off social media for quite some time).

My wife and a friend have made a book and are trying to kickstart it very soon.

It's a book about art appreciation for children.

https://linesinart.com

You should totally sign up to buy a copy/kickstart it when it's released and tell your friends and re-post this post.

Let's have some nice stuff in this horrible timeline.

Lines in Art Book on Kickstarter

Art book for kids launching on Kickstarter soon!

Lines in Art Book on Kickstarter

Accurate.

Dems MUST learn to create a “big tent” party and stop doing purity tests. No one is aligned with you 100%, but PLENTY of people are aligned with you 90%. We must band together as allies, despite our imperfections.

#Democrats #leftWing #purityTest

@kangaroo5383 👴🏻😭
@chockenberry @Joekw Also, I think I screwed up the threading on the reply. It may be easier to look at the posts on my profile and look at them chronologically. Sorry!
@chockenberry @Joekw I replied in a thread here, but I think there’s a misconception. A scene not being frontmost does not mean it is UIScene.ActivationState.foregroundInactive. That scene lifecycle state means something specific and it usually does not apply here (unless another scene is almost entirely occluding it).

@chockenberry If that’s not what you are seeing in recent Betas, please do give us more information so we can dig into that as that’s a bug.

Hope this helps!

@chockenberry 2) Active appearance on the phone

From what we can tell this is no longer reproducing on recent builds for iOS 26 or iPadOS 26. We took phone and pad apps on both systems and observed the change of UIUserInterfaceActiveAppearance when the scene was backgrounded to return to the Home Screen. We did not observe erratic behavior, but instead saw predicable changes from UIUserInterfaceActiveAppearance.active to UIUserInterfaceActiveAppearance.inactive.

@chockenberry As to the specific question, we would recommend you save state when the UIScene.ActivationState changes to either UIScene.ActivationState.foregroundInactive or UIScene.ActivationState.background. If you do need to know when a scene is no longer front-most, UITraitCollection’s UIUserInterfaceActiveAppearance is the thing to use. That’s why we enabled it on iOS and iPad this year.
@chockenberry So the misconception here is a conflation of the visual appearance of the scene (and its frontmost status) with its actual lifecycle state. The lifecycle state is determined by UIScene.ActivationState. Its “appearance” is based on the UITraitCollection’s UIUserInterfaceActiveAppearance. A scene not being frontmost does not mean it is UIScene.ActivationState.foregroundInactive.