

Fixes a bug where editing a Text Style would not update the text in some Symbol instances using that Text Style.Fixes a bug where paths would be ignored when converting Text on Path to outlines.Fixes a bug where newly inserted Components would not be selected if they were inserted via the Insert menu.Fixes a bug on macOS Monterey that could cause prototypes to not work properly if Live Text was enabled.Fixes a bug where converting Text on Path to outlines would skip over emojis.Now, when you share your prototype, you’ll be prompted to save it to your Workspace so you can easily share it with everyone you need. We’ve made it easier to share a prototype from local documents.You can now upload a local Sketch document to your Workspace from the Recent Documents tab in the Workspace window by dragging it into a Project.We removed the checkbox about sharing usage analytics in Sketch because we stopped collecting this information altogether.

#Restart sketch trial how to
I'll show you how to see just what an app is doing to your files, because this is an important skill IMO. I certainly won't be installing it again.
#Restart sketch trial trial
I highly doubt that anybody here has the intention to use such information to extend their trial periods indefinitely. I don't think it's unethical to just show what the heck the app is doing. So it's storing that info somewhere else.and what's even odder is that I used an app uninstaller to delete it, so whatever file it left behind wasn't detected by them. Incidentally, deleting AppDelete's plist file doesn't reset the trial. In principle you might sleuth this out using lsof to see which files are touched while AppDelete starts up. In other words, a file which looks "official" and won't interfere with system functionality, but only AppDelete knows the name and location. It might be stored in something tricky like ~/Library/Application Support/AddressBook/Metadata/C433D242-DB05-4894-A387-EC5B1B62A540/ABPerson In which case you may never find the file where this data is stored. That being said, the forever war of scummy users vs scummy developers results in this data being written into odd places with unpredictable names. Well behaved apps which trust their potential customers will store this information in a plist in ~/Library/Preferences.ĪppDelete, for example, might store this info in the file:
