At WWDC, Apple treated its Mac OS X and iOS programmers to a preview of its entirely revised Xcode 4 integrated development environment. Here's a look at what's new and how it matters for end users.
For consumers and outside observers, Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) is always a chance to see what lies in store when the next versions of its operating systems come to their devices.
Have you ever found yourself stuck in the frustrating gap between design and development? You’ve spent hours perfecting a prototype, only to face the tedious task of translating it into code, hoping ...
[Ricard Dias] wrote in to tell us about his guide for developing Linux applications on a Mac. He really enjoys the development environment provided by XCode, and it doesn’t take much to make it work ...
Apple’s development tools for Mac OS X and iOS are joining the iOS 5 launch party today with the release of Xcode 4.2. The new version of Xcode is now available as a free download in the Mac App Store ...
All 16 videos and supporting material from the Spring 2025 version of Stanford's CS193p course are now online, for free.
Xcode is certainly not the first tool Apple made for its developer community, but it may be the most well thought out tool they have produced. First demoed during Apple’s Worldwide Developers ...
Claiming to make accessible the same APIs that it uses for iPhone development, Apple today announced that the object-oriented application programming environment that will be used for the iPhone SDK.
At WWDC, Apple treated its Mac OS X and iOS programmers to a preview of its entirely revised Xcode 4 integrated development environment. Here's a look at what's new and how it matters for end users.
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