Thank you very much for bringing this issue to me!
I will definitely have to have a second look at the SDK licence.
In the "worst" case scenario, yes - learning to program Cocoa on Mac
OS X would be a good start for iPhone.
Regards,
Pavel Kapinos.
On 18-Mar-08, at 7:08 PM, I. Savant wrote:
The answer is in the requirement to have ADC online membership and
to download iPhone SDK, which will automatically promote you to
iPhone developer too.
That's not necessarily the case.
Again, I'm not trying to be difficult, but you haven't addressed
Apple's "permission". The typical i
Hi,
The answer is in the requirement to have ADC online membership and to
download iPhone SDK, which will automatically promote you to iPhone
developer too.
Regards,
Pavel Kapinos.
On 18-Mar-08, at 5:53 PM, I. Savant wrote:
The course "Programming with Cocoa frameworks on Mac OS X and for
The course "Programming with Cocoa frameworks on Mac OS X and for
iPhone" starts on March 25 at 6:30pm.
I'm curious about your iPhone content. Do you cover the iPhone SDK
or are you merely referring to the fact that learning XCode / IB /
Objective-C 2.0 / Cocoa in general prepares you for
The course "Programming with Cocoa frameworks on Mac OS X and for
iPhone" starts on March 25 at 6:30pm.
The course will cover:
• Xcode and Interface Builder
• Objective-C 2.0
• Controls and Views
• Cocoa Bindings
• Document-based apps
• Core Data
Hi,
I've been developing with Cocoa frameworks for a while now, and want
to see if there is an interest to learn how to develop apps on Mac OS
X and for iPhone.
So, if I can get at least 3 people signed up, I will start classes.
Please reply to this post on CL:
http://vancouver.craigslist.
Hi,
I've been developing with Cocoa frameworks for a while now, and want
to see if there is an interest to learn how to develop apps on Mac OS
X and for iPhone.
So, if I can get at least 3 people signed up, I will start classes.
Thanks.
___
Cocoa