Le 7 janv. 09 à 14:18, Ammar Ibrahim a écrit :

On Wed, Jan 7, 2009 at 2:38 PM, Jason Stephenson <ja...@sigio.com> wrote:

Ammar Ibrahim wrote:

The sample you sent is deprecated. This is code from 1992 that uses old networking APIs. And I read a complete book about networking programming in C. But my goal is to do it in ObjC/Cocoa. I can't believe that there;s no up
to date code to look at!


There is more up to date code. I put the search in Google and saw the first was a TCPServer example, but didn't verify it was the one I'd seen before.

site:developer.apple.com tcp server cocoa

That will get you more relevant results, but you should be figuring these searches out on your own. One of the first rules of asking for help online is learning to help yourself. (Please don't take that personally. It is a
general rule for everyone.)


I have been reading for over a month now. And I did all the homework I can. I read 2 Cocoa/ObjC books, 1 C book, and one Unix networking programming. And I went over all guides and sample code in ADC. I did all of that before I asked my question, and I asked it because I couldn't find what I'm looking
for. So thanks for the advice, but I knew that, and did it already.

The more cocoa'ish way to do networking is to use CoreFoundation socket (a high level wrapper on BSD socket), or to use a third party network library.
You can also use the CFStream API (tool-free bridged with NSStream API).

There is no (good) generic networking class in Cocoa. Usually, if two Cocoa app have to talk over the net, they use distributed object.



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