- ^ Free Book Cocoa Programming For Os X The Big Nerd Ranch Guide 5th Edition Big Nerd Ranch Guides ^ Uploaded By Danielle Steel, cocoa programming for os x the big nerd ranch guide big nerd ranch guides english edition ebook hillegass aaron preble adam chandler nate amazonde kindle shop adam preble learned cocoa.
- Description Covering the bulk of what you need to know to develop full-featured applications for OS X, this edition is updated for OS X Yosemite (10.10), Xcode 6, and Swift. Written in an engaging tutorial style and class-tested for clarity and accuracy, it is an invaluable resource for any Mac programmer. The authors introduce the.
COCOA® PROGRAMMING FOR MAC® OS X FOURTH EDITION Aaron Hillegass Adam Preble Upper Saddle River, NJ. Boston. Indianapolis. San Francisco New York. Toronto. Montreal. London. Munich. Paris. Madrid. The best-selling introduction to Cocoa, once again updated to cover the latest Mac programming technologies, and still enthusiastically recommended by experienced Mac OS X developers. “Cocoa® Programming for Mac® OS X is considered by most to be the de-facto intro-to-OS X programming text.” —Bob Rudis, the Apple Blog.
How do you do C# without knowing C? Don't answer, that's a rhetorical question.
To learn the basics of Objective-C, read the PDF book that comes with the develoepr tools. The title seems to change, but it usually includes the words 'Objective-C Language.'
As someone coming from a C background who has struggled to really 'get' C++, I was at first jarred by the appearance of the square brackets that dominate ObjC (but you rarely see the -> and . operators), but I really was able to grasp a lot of OOP concepts that had eluded me previously.
After you've read, say, about the first half of that book, start in with Aaron Hillegass' Cocoa Programming for Mac OS X (2nd edition, with the yellow cover, not the brown one). That ought to get you pretty far in Cocoa programming.
To learn the basics of Objective-C, read the PDF book that comes with the develoepr tools. The title seems to change, but it usually includes the words 'Objective-C Language.'
As someone coming from a C background who has struggled to really 'get' C++, I was at first jarred by the appearance of the square brackets that dominate ObjC (but you rarely see the -> and . operators), but I really was able to grasp a lot of OOP concepts that had eluded me previously.
After you've read, say, about the first half of that book, start in with Aaron Hillegass' Cocoa Programming for Mac OS X (2nd edition, with the yellow cover, not the brown one). That ought to get you pretty far in Cocoa programming.
Mac Os X Update
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Mac Os X Versions
Jan 15, 2007 6:03 AM