On Mar 12, 2008, at 6:24 PM, Michael Gregoire wrote:
Though tutorials and guides are severely lacking in the Objective-C
2.0 arena.
Obj-C 2.0 takes 20 minutes to learn. There's not that much different,
and the docs cover it pretty well.
--
Seth Willits
On 13.03.2008, at 04:03, Jens Alfke wrote:
Part of the fun of being an early adopter is that you have to figure
stuff out before there are books to explain it. It's your choice;
you could wait six months or a year for some books. But then you
won't be one of the first.
(Actually, the
On Mar 13, 2008, at 5:43 AM, Thomas Engelmeier wrote:
Maybe it paid off to be a late adoptor. Inside
Macintosh:AppleTalk and New Inside Macintosh:Quicktime / New
Inside Macintosh:Interapplication Communication set a very high
standard for documentation - far higher than the IBM UI
For the beginner cocoacast.com has some follow along screencasts on
Objective C 2.0 as well as the Aaron Hillegass examples.
They are not books but are about as close to a tutorial as you will
find and like the apple docs the price is right.
Greg
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On 12 Mar '08, at 11:23 PM, Seth Willits wrote:
Obj-C 2.0 takes 20 minutes to learn. There's not that much
different, and the docs cover it pretty well.
For the most part; but there are some subtleties* that can take some
extra time to grasp later on as you run into them. (They are
Does anyone know the status of the Cocoa Design Patterns book by
Erik Buck, rough-cuts version or otherwise?
Amazon says 12 January 2009.
On Mar 12, 2008, at 5:54 PM, colo wrote:
And might there be others ?
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My preorder on Amazon says it's shipping from July 10-18
On Thu, Mar 13, 2008 at 11:37 AM, David Carlisle [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
Does anyone know the status of the Cocoa Design Patterns book by
Erik Buck, rough-cuts version or otherwise?
Amazon says 12 January 2009.
On Mar 12, 2008, at
On 13.03.2008, at 13:39, Jeff LaMarche wrote:
On Mar 13, 2008, at 5:43 AM, Thomas Engelmeier wrote:
Maybe it paid off to be a late adoptor. Inside
Macintosh:AppleTalk and New Inside Macintosh:Quicktime / New
Inside Macintosh:Interapplication Communication set a very high
standard for
Sounds like it might be delayed, from her mailing list:
I can't write about the SDK for TUAW, for O'Reilly and can't pub
anything (we're even worried about technical review!) for Addison
Wesley.
-- Erica, upcreek
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I know hillegass is doing one but has anyone a date on it ?
And might there be others ?
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I know hillegass is doing one but has anyone a date on it ?
And might there be others ?
Barnes and Noble shows a publication of June 13, 2008, and Amazon.com shows a
publication of May 26, 2008:
http://search.barnesandnoble.com/booksearch/isbnInquiry.asp?EAN=9780321503619
Actually, the docs are already online at apple.com.
Books are not docs, they're tutorials. Though tutorials and guides
are severely lacking in the Objective-C 2.0 arena.
On Mar 12, 2008, at 9:09 PM, colo wrote:
Wow thats a long time to wait for new docs and working tutorials for
the new
FYI I talked to the publisher tuesday and the Cohen book, The XCode 3 Book
has been canceled :(
/vjl/
On Wed, Mar 12, 2008 at 8:48 PM, Gary L. Wade
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I know hillegass is doing one but has anyone a date on it ?
And might there be others ?
Barnes and Noble shows a
On 12 Mar '08, at 6:09 PM, colo wrote:
As I two really want to get started at learning how to code for the
NDA thing as well
That NDA thing must be just that awesome to wait so long for some docs
Part of the fun of being an early adopter is that you have to figure
stuff out before there
On Mar 12, 2008, at 11:03 PM, Jens Alfke wrote:
(Actually, the current docs are quite good, all things considered.
Back in the day, the system documentation used to consist of badly-
Xeroxed copies of napkins that the programmers had scrawled some
instructions on, while suffering from
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