> Nothing explicit is said about it, but none of the public-facing pages
> mention either Cocoa or Objective-C. It's all SwiftUI and Swift. Searches
> still show pages for them, but not the clickable links I followed.
Try:
developer.apple.com -> Click “Develop” -> Click “Documentation” (both at
Based on the listing, I’d guess UWP.
Saagar Jha
> On Nov 19, 2019, at 21:18, Richard Charles via Cocoa-dev
> wrote:
>
>> On Nov 13, 2019, at 11:58 AM, Richard Charles wrote:
>>
>> Apple released iTunes for Windows in October 2003.
>>
>
>
> Apple just posted a job opening for a Senior Soft
> On Nov 13, 2019, at 11:58 AM, Richard Charles wrote:
>
> Apple released iTunes for Windows in October 2003.
>
Apple just posted a job opening for a Senior Software Engineer- Windows Media
Apps. It would be interesting to know how they plan on porting the new macOS
media apps to Windows and
Saagar Jha
> On Nov 19, 2019, at 20:01, Richard Charles via Cocoa-dev
> wrote:
>
>
>> On Nov 19, 2019, at 6:24 PM, Pier Bover via Cocoa-dev
>> wrote:
>>
>>> When/if Apple decides to deprecate Cocoa they will announce it many years
>>> ahead of time
>>>
>>
>> Like they did with 32 bits a
> On Nov 19, 2019, at 6:24 PM, Pier Bover via Cocoa-dev
> wrote:
>
>> When/if Apple decides to deprecate Cocoa they will announce it many years
>> ahead of time
>>
>
> Like they did with 32 bits and OpenGL deprecation?
>
The 32 bit depreciation has had a lot of discussion on this thread.
> On Nov 19, 2019, at 6:24 PM, Pier Bover wrote:
>
> > When/if Apple decides to deprecate Cocoa they will announce it many years
> > ahead of time
>
> Like they did with 32 bits and OpenGL deprecation?
Yes, exactly. 32Bit was deprecated in 2012 and officially killed in
2019. OpenG
> When/if Apple decides to deprecate Cocoa they will announce it many years
ahead of time
Like they did with 32 bits and OpenGL deprecation?
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The sky is not falling. When/if Apple decides to deprecate Cocoa they will
announce it many years ahead of time, like they did for Carbon back in 2012
(which was only officially killed in 2019). They typically make announcements
like that at a WWDC. They aren’t going to stop supporting it and
There seems to be a misunderstanding that just because the word “Cocoa” doesn’t
appear, nor "Objective-C” in the latest WWDC videos to a great extent, that
they are no longer relevant. If you watch any of the videos to the end, you’ll
notice that rather than repeating every detail every year, t
On Tue, 19 Nov 2019 13:51:14 -0700, you wrote:
>When committing to 64 bit Apple said NO to Carbon but YES to Cocoa and YES to
>Core Foundation and YES to a lot of other stuff. The OS still has the XNU
>(Mach) Kernel and FreeBSD (written in C & C++), the Cocoa frameworks (base
>layer written in
> On Nov 19, 2019, at 12:51 PM, Richard Charles via Cocoa-dev
> wrote:
>
> If I understand it correctly, there is a linkage between Swift and
> Objective-C. Apple devised a way to call the Cocoa frameworks written in
> Objective-C from the Swift language using the magic of the LLVM compiler.
> On Nov 19, 2019, at 9:41 AM, Turtle Creek Software via Cocoa-dev
> wrote:
>
> I have been poking around on developer.apple.com, trying to get the big
> picture on the future of Cocoa for Mac. Ditto for the future of big apps.
>
Send an email to Aaron Hillegass. He might be able to give yo
This. So much this.
On 11/19/19, Steve Mills via Cocoa-dev wrote:
> You should use an external poll site for this rather than filling the list
> with yet another thread full of discussions and arguments.
>
> Steve via iPhone
>
>> On Nov 19, 2019, at 10:42, Turtle Creek Software via Cocoa-dev
>>
+1
Also, the reference docs can be toggled between Obj-C & Swift via the
“Language” popup at the top of the page.
—Rob
> On Nov 19, 2019, at 9:48 AM, Steve Mills via Cocoa-dev
> wrote:
>
> You should use an external poll site for this rather than filling the list
> with yet another thread
You should use an external poll site for this rather than filling the list with
yet another thread full of discussions and arguments.
Steve via iPhone
> On Nov 19, 2019, at 10:42, Turtle Creek Software via Cocoa-dev
> wrote:
>
> Before I email comments to Apple, it would help to know more abo
I have been poking around on developer.apple.com, trying to get the big
picture on the future of Cocoa for Mac. Ditto for the future of big apps.
Nothing explicit is said about it, but none of the public-facing pages
mention either Cocoa or Objective-C. It's all SwiftUI and Swift. Searches
still
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