I looked at the Java Micro Edition, and did some simple programming using a mobile phone emulator. Then I looked at X-Code, but that seemed to require a MacIntosh for development. Is Objective-C the way to go? Also, what is the best 'getting-started' book to use?

Views: 77

Replies to This Discussion

how are you
If you're wanting to write for the App Store, XCode is pretty much it. All of the iPhone libraries are either Objective-C (user interface) with some C level under pinnings.

As far as books go, to be honest I don't believe anything really talks about the current 3.1 OS, so I'm a bit hesitant to recommend anything today. The Apple docs on the dev site aren't too bad.

rob.
Mara said:
how are you
Let's just say I've been better.
I have this error: ".objc_class_name_MCPConnection", referenced from:
If you look at some of the developer agreements, at least one of them specified that the software must be developed on a Mac.

The Mac Mini is the cheapest to buy new, but any Intel-based Mac will do. I recommend against any of the single-core Macs myself.

I've read Zdziarski's "iPhone Forensics" book and it was really good. (Perhaps outdated now.) And its an O'Reilly book. So his other books might also be good.

I've looked through a "cookbook" in the bookstore. It seemed really straight-forward, except that it kept mentioning things that were not in the public API's (Apple's agreements require using only public API's in apps for the App Store.)

Aaron Hillegass and the Big Nerd Ranch have been doing Cocoa training and books for many years. His Cocoa and Mac OS X books are very good. (Objective-C is rolled up in there too.)

Once you have your developer account with Apple, you can access some videos on iPhone programming.

There are some alternative iPhone App generators out there, but they are usually specific to games and such. Apparently Adobe has a Flash-to-iPhone app generator as well. (Turns a flash show into a stand-alone app.)

It is possible to do Objective-C coding with any computer that can run the gcc compiler. I've seen a friend using it to write Objective-C on a Linux box (intending to transfer to a Mac sometime later.) However, that does not include the Cocoa frameworks that ship with the Apple OS's.

XCode does have some very good features for programming on iPhone or Mac. In particular, the code-completion feature makes entering the very-long method names very easy. (Not only do you know there is no typo in the name, but the argument list is completed as well.)
Thanks! I'll start looking at getting a mac and diving into this.
Hi Kevin,
I noticed that, like me, you are getting into iPhone development.

I joined the iPhone Development group and pretty new to iPhone development. I am looking to network with other developers, share my experiences and learn from others. I have been an applications developer for a large corporations in Jax, FL for more than 25 years. I got involved with iPhone development as a fall back due to many layoffs at my company. Fortunately I am still employed and enjoying working with Apple's XCODE SDK.

I just released my first iPhone App, Party Twacker, on December 11, 2009. If you ever get stumped on and iPhone dev issues, feel free to send me a message.

Take Care,
Kevin Collins
I checked out the party Twacker - cool! Sadly, I am not into the bar or even the drinking scene anymore, but if I was I'm sure I'd use it. You can see some of my stuff here:
http://user.gru.net/nemesis/iphoneAppPages/
You have been busy! Six apps already in iTunes. That's impressive. I am not trying to get personal but how has your marketing been going? I am in the process of publishing a Lite Version of my app to try get more interested buyers. With the App Store not having a return policy, people are more reluctant to purchase apps. I am checking out your apps now and they look really cool. Best of Luck with your Apps.
Kevin

Kevin Neelands said:
I checked out the party Twacker - cool! Sadly, I am not into the bar or even the drinking scene anymore, but if I was I'm sure I'd use it. You can see some of my stuff here:
http://user.gru.net/nemesis/iphoneAppPages/
How's marketing going? I'm earning enough to treat myself to delivery pizza once a week. I *think* good reviews help the marketing process, so if you enjoy and of my apps please write one! The picture-kaleidoscope is a rather good fit with party twacker - take a photo of a cute girl, create a a kaleidoscope image of her, and she'll be tickled pink!

RSS

Happy 10th year, JCertif!

Notes

Welcome to Codetown!

Codetown is a social network. It's got blogs, forums, groups, personal pages and more! You might think of Codetown as a funky camper van with lots of compartments for your stuff and a great multimedia system, too! Best of all, Codetown has room for all of your friends.

When you create a profile for yourself you get a personal page automatically. That's where you can be creative and do your own thing. People who want to get to know you will click on your name or picture and…
Continue

Created by Michael Levin Dec 18, 2008 at 6:56pm. Last updated by Michael Levin May 4, 2018.

Looking for Jobs or Staff?

Check out the Codetown Jobs group.

 

Enjoy the site? Support Codetown with your donation.



InfoQ Reading List

C++26 Draft Finalized with Static Reflection, Contracts, and Sender/Receiver Types

The next major release of C++ reached an important milestone earlier this month, when the ISO C++ committee froze the feature set that will go into C++26. Notable additions include compile-time reflection, contracts, asynchronous execution, and many others.

By Sergio De Simone

Presentation: Continuous Delivery Is Not Possible Without Pair Programming: Lessons From SpareBank 1 and SINTEF in Norway

Asgaut Mjølne Söderbom and Ola Hast unravel the powerful synergy between pair programming and continuous delivery. They explain how this shift allowed their team to abandon traditional hurdles like excessive WIP, lengthy pull requests, and multiple test environments, leading to ultra-fast deployments, superior code quality, and a highly cohesive, efficient engineering team.

By Asgaut Mjølne Söderbom, Ola Hast

AWS Lambda Gains Native Avro and Protobuf Support for Kafka Events with Schema Registry Integration

Lambda now natively supports Apache Avro and Protobuf events, streamlining Kafka event processing - an enhancement that eliminates the need for custom deserialization, automates schema validation and filtering, and optimizes costs through efficient event handling. Integration with AWS Glue and Confluent registries simplifies development, allowing cleaner data consumption and enhanced scalability.

By Steef-Jan Wiggers

Article: Building Strategic Influence as a Staff Engineer or Engineering Manager

To increase your impact and grow your career, you need to be involved in conversations that happen at a greater scope than the scope you have in your current role. Being involved will give you influence over this, help you direct and maximise your impact, and also allow you to bring better context to your day job, and to those working around you.

By Mark Allen

Podcast: From Code to Strategy: Drive Organizational Impact Through Strategic Conversations and User Focus

In this podcast, Shane Hastie, Lead Editor for Culture & Methods, spoke to Mark Allen about how engineers can expand their influence through strategic conversations, user-focused development practices, and excellence in incident management. Mark emphasizes the importance of building cross-organizational relationships and working on meaningful problems with positive impact.

By Mark Allen

© 2025   Created by Michael Levin.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service