DISQUS

toxicsoftware.com: iPhone Development

  • Simon Fell · 1 year ago
    NSXML is already supported on the iPhone, why would you need TouchXML ?
  • schwa · 1 year ago
    Well it is all NDA so we can't say much.

    But I should say your experience of the SDK seems to be different to mine.

    You might want to go check the SDK Documentation, which is quite explicit about this matter. Also look in
    /Developer/Platforms/**/Foundation/Headers and see if you can find the required classes.

    Of course everything could change before the next release. But rest assured I didn't just write the code for fun.
  • Simon Fell · 1 year ago
    Looks like we can take this to cocoa-dev.
  • schwa · 1 year ago
    Don't think we can take it to cocoa-dev. The API is NDA (and Scott just clamped down on iPhone discussion on list).
  • Jordy/Jediknil · 1 year ago
    I'm not an iPhone developer as of yet, but it seems to me that the "Touch" moniker seems a little ridiculous for frameworks that have nothing to do with UI.

    "Mobile", perhaps, after MobileSafari?
  • schwa · 1 year ago
    @jordy/jediknil I hope you're also taking Apple to task for "Cocoa", what does "Cocoa" have to do with anything? And why we're at it, what is this "Apple" crap? Apple doesn't say "Computer manufacturer" to me.

    And what would be mobile about MobileXML? There are possibilities that this code will run on linux (as part of nu) and windows (as part of Cocotron). Does that make it more or less Mobile? And wouldn't the Mobile prefix also mean it should run in say, RIM and Android too?

    TouchCode is primarily an umbrella project for code that is designed to augment CocoaTouch. That's why it is called TouchCode. Take it or leave it.

    Most names suck anyway, as I'm sure you're aware Jordy or should I call you "Jediknil"?
  • Jordy/Jediknil · 1 year ago
    Touché. No pun intended.