I think I know the problem you're having. I experience it too, but it's intermittent. Sometimes clicking Manual shows me the entire project folder and I can select the editable classes, but other times it only shows the interface versions of them, which aren't editable and cannot have IBOutlets dragged to them (you can tell b/c it'll say internal class and has less code). I have noticed that if I toggle back and forth between Automatic and Manual, I can usually get the editable class to appear. I also will toggle the assistant editor off, select a different View Controller or two on the storyboard, then go back to my original one, turn the Assistant Editor back on, and it starts working again.

I had this issue and was able to resolve it. I resolved it by viewing the storyboard as source. I then removed everything in and including the tags (Saving it to restore later). I then went back and viewed the storyboard normally and created a new ViewController. Once the new ViewController was on the storyboard the assistant editor acted as normal. I then went back and viewed the storyboard as source code once again and replaced the current tags with the one I removed previously. This resolved my issues hopefully it will help for you.


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Explanation: for me, the reason why it wasn't working is that I created a controller, view, and model Folder and I put the Main.storyboard inside the view folder and the viewController.swift inside the controller view, therefore when I try to access the assistant Result Xcode doesn't know where the viewController file is, so he is not able to connect between the storyboard file and the latter.

select main.storyboard and select your view controller.at the far right select identity inspector.check if the class name is the same name as your .swift file, if it is not you need to put in the file name and the assistant should show up now.

One reason for this happening is moving the swift file to a different folder. If I move the swift file out of the folder, the assistant view works again. If I move the swift file back into a folder, it fails again.

The AISD Urban Education Leadership Academy guides prospective principals, assistant principals and novice principals through a robust program that includes classroom training based on a proprietary curriculum and one-on-one coaching from a retired principal.

Actually, I'm a fan of Coolmuster products, and I've used your products like Android Assistant. It works well. So this time when I find iOS assistant is available, I decide to give it a try. It do suprised me! With it, I can bulk transfer any files from phone to the computer very fast. Also, I can upload files from the computer to my device within simple clicks. All in all, this is the exact assistant I am looking for!

An assistant principal in the Northwest Independent School District was arrested this week and charged with child sex abuse. Fort Worth police took Mose Brown into custody Monday night and charged him with the continuous sexual abuse of a child under the age of 14.

Stichler has been the principal at Caney Creek since 2017, after serving as principal at Moorhead Junior High School. A Bryan, Texas, native, he has been with Conroe ISD in some capacity since 1999. Stichler began his career with the District as a coach at Caney Creek, before moving to Moorhead as an assistant principal. He was then assistant principal at The Woodlands College Park High School, before becoming associate principal at Conroe High School, followed by serving as principal of the Conroe High School ninth grade campus.

The assistant superintendent position became open because Luci Schulz is relocating to North Texas to be near family. Ms. Schulz will be the Area Superintendent of the Ryan High School Zone in Denton ISD effective July 1.

With 27 years experience in education, Mr. Stephens has served as a teacher, coach, counselor, assistant principal, associate principal and Lufkin High School principal. Mr. Stephens and his wife Sonja, both graduates of the Lufkin High School Class of 1987, have two daughters. Madi, LHS Class of 2014, is a graduate of the University of Houston and Peyton, LHS Class of 2017, is a graduate of Texas A&M.

Dr. Spikes was born and raised in Lufkin, Texas, where his parents Pastor Willie Spikes, Sr. and Charlotte Spikes reside. After graduating from Lufkin High School in 1996, he attended The University of Texas at Austin (UT-Austin) and earned a Bachelor of Arts, majoring in English. He returned to Lufkin, Texas and taught 7th grade English/Language Arts at Lufkin Middle School and served as an assistant principal at Lufkin High School after earning his Masters of Educational Leadership at Stephen F. Austin State University.

Siri (/siri, sri/ SEE-ree, SI-ree) is the digital assistant that is part of Apple Inc.'s iOS, iPadOS, watchOS, macOS, tvOS, audioOS, and visionOS operating systems.[1][2] It uses voice queries, gesture based control, focus-tracking and a natural-language user interface to answer questions, make recommendations, and perform actions by delegating requests to a set of Internet services. With continued use, it adapts to users' individual language usages, searches, and preferences, returning individualized results.

Siri's original release on iPhone 4S in 2011 received mixed reviews. It received praise for its voice recognition and contextual knowledge of user information, including calendar appointments, but was criticized for requiring stiff user commands and having a lack of flexibility. It was also criticized for lacking information on certain nearby places and for its inability to understand certain English accents. In 2016 and 2017, a number of media reports said that Siri lacked innovation, particularly against new competing voice assistants. The reports concerned Siri's limited set of features, "bad" voice recognition, and undeveloped service integrations as causing trouble for Apple in the field of artificial intelligence and cloud-based services; the basis for the complaints reportedly due to stifled development, as caused by Apple's prioritization of user privacy and executive power struggles within the company.[3] Its launch was also overshadowed by the death of Steve Jobs, which occurred one day after the launch.

Siri was acquired by Apple Inc. in April 2010 under the direction of Steve Jobs.[12] Apple's first notion of a digital personal assistant appeared in a 1987 concept video, Knowledge Navigator.[13][14]

The original American voice of Siri was recorded in July 2005 by Susan Bennett, who was unaware it would eventually be used for the voice assistant.[15][16] A report from The Verge in September 2013 about voice actors, their work, and machine learning developments, hinted that Allison Dufty was the voice behind Siri,[17][18] but this was disproven when Dufty wrote on her website that she was "absolutely, positively not the voice of Siri."[16] Citing growing pressure, Bennett revealed her role as Siri in October, and her claim was confirmed by Ed Primeau, an American audio forensics expert.[16] Apple has never acknowledged it.[16]

iOS 17 and IPadOS 17 will allow users to simply say "Siri" to initiate Siri, and the virtual assistant now supports back to back requests, allowing users to issue multiple requests and conversations without reactivating it.[56] In the public beta versions of iOS 17, iPadOS 17, and macOS Sonoma, Apple added support for bilingual queries to Siri.[57]

In June 2017, The Wall Street Journal published an extensive report on the lack of innovation with Siri following competitors' advancement in the field of voice assistants. Noting that Apple workers' anxiety levels "went up a notch" on the announcement of Amazon's Alexa, the Journal wrote: "Today, Apple is playing catch-up in a product category it invented, increasing worries about whether the technology giant has lost some of its innovation edge." The report gave the primary causes being Apple's prioritization of user privacy, including randomly-tagged six-month Siri searches, whereas Google and Amazon keep data until actively discarded by the user,[clarification needed] and executive power struggles within Apple. Apple did not comment on the report, while Eddy Cue said: "Apple often uses generic data rather than user data to train its systems and has the ability to improve Siri's performance for individual users with information kept on their iPhones."[3][77]

Perez has spent the majority of his career in Northside ISD. After teaching for two years in the Edgewood Independent School District, he joined NISD as a reading teacher at Neff Middle School in 1993. He moved into campus administration in 1999 serving as assistant principal at both Jones and Jordan middle schools, vice principal at Rawlinson Middle School, principal at Pease Middle School, and most recently, principal at Folks Middle School.

Prior to joining Northside, Jordan served as an assistant principal at Swansea High School, Swansea, S.C.; curriculum development coordinator, Victoria ISD; executive director of Curriculum, Corpus Christi ISD; assistant superintendent for Curriculum and Instruction, Corpus Christi ISD; and most recently she was the assistant superintendent for Curriculum Services at Lake Travis ISD.

Woods started his career in NISD in 2009 as the vice principal at Brandeis High School. He became principal at Clark High School in 2012. Prior to NISD, he served as an assistant principal at Reagan High School in North East ISD.

She began her teaching career at Ross Elementary School in Bryan ISD in 1983, before moving to NISD in 1985 to become a teacher at Zachry Middle School. She served as assistant principal at Zachry for seven years starting in 1990. She transitioned to Organizational and Staff Development in 1997 serving as a staff development specialist, assistant director, and director.

Portillo has served as an Assistant Superintendent in Tornillo ISD since 2018. During that time, he led the development and implementation of campus improvement plans to meet district goals. In addition, he was responsible for the oversight of teaching and learning strategic programs, projects, and initiatives outlined in the district strategic plan to ensure they lead to maximum student achievement. Before his role as assistant superintendent, he worked as a staff developer at the national level for the AVID program and instructional math officer at Socorro ISD. His experience also includes multiple leadership and teaching positions at campuses in the El Paso region. He has 23 years of experience in education. ff782bc1db

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