Yeah, it does. I was thinking about it bassackwardsly.

Would it be recommended to package my ARC code with ARC turned off and package 
that in a framework and then link to that from the non ARC app that will need 
to load it?

Thank you, sir.  

AZ

Sent from my iPhone

> On Feb 23, 2016, at 6:16 PM, Greg Parker <gpar...@apple.com> wrote:
> 
> 
>> On Feb 23, 2016, at 1:30 PM, Alex Zavatone <z...@mac.com> wrote:
>> 
>> Hi all.  I'm in the middle of looking at an interesting problem on the iOS 
>> side.
>> 
>> We have our code that is ARC and uses external compiled C libs that I'm 
>> being asked to plug into another iOS project that's significantly larger 
>> than ours.
>> 
>> The intent is to run as a little service that can be launched within the 
>> other iOS project.
>> 
>> The other project that we must fit within is not ARC. Converting it to ARC 
>> is not feasible, nor our responsibility.
>> 
>> I am successfully building the iOS app that doesn't use ARC with Xcode 7.1 
>> and running on iOS 9.1.
>> 
>> Now, I'm familiar with the -fno-objc-arc build flags to disable compiling 
>> one file at a time, but is there any possibility to include iOS code that 
>> does use ARC within an app that doesn't?
> 
> Yes, -fno-objc-arc works on iOS too. Was that your question?
> 
> 
> -- 
> Greg Parker     gpar...@apple.com     Runtime Wrangler
> 
> 

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