* Restore BLE State
* Log privacy
* AccessoryManager to handle restored connection
* Comment task out
* Switch the node list to a two column layout
* Keep asian translations of channel details string
* Update restore state function based on conversation with jake
* Update Meshtastic/Accessory/Transports/Bluetooth Low Energy/BLETransport.swift
Co-authored-by: Copilot <175728472+Copilot@users.noreply.github.com>
* Update Meshtastic/Accessory/Transports/Bluetooth Low Energy/BLETransport.swift
Co-authored-by: Copilot <175728472+Copilot@users.noreply.github.com>
* always show node list search bar
* Update auto correct modifier
* Dont show online animations for ios 17, remove online animation from node map, remove online circle from position popover
* Work in progress.
* Update detents
* Gate the discovery process while restoring
* Use geometry reader to size weather tiles on node details
* Update BLE Transport
* Update location weather condistion styles
* Log privacy in didReceive
* Remove extra dividers from admin key config, fix onboarding typo
* Bump minimum catalyst target
* Bump mac target version
* Use @FetchRequest for UserList to try and use less memory on ios 17
* Revert change to @fetchrequest
* Stab in the dark for Devices crash
* Updated UserList (back?) to @FetchRequest
* Set mac minimum to 15
* Nil out continuation after use
* Use @FetchRequest for the node list to stop crashes on iOS 17
* Handle failed connections during restoration
---------
Co-authored-by: Jake-B <jake-b@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Copilot <175728472+Copilot@users.noreply.github.com>
After this change, a developer can now clone the project and run without the build failing due to lint errors! 😃
* I ran `swiftlint --fix` to resolve many auto-correctable issues (mostly whitespace)
* Excluded the `Meshtastic/Protobufs` directory from lint, since that code is automatically generated.
* Converted some single letter method parameters to lowercase.
* Converted several instances `force_cast` to instead use `guard` or `if let` to unwrap optional values. During this change, some of the SwiftUI views became "too complex to be solved in a reasonable time", so I broke up the views into distinct sub-expressions.
I was able to build and run the app on an iOS simulator.