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| Step into Xcode: Mac OS X Development | 
| Author: Fritz Anderson Publisher: Addison-Wesley Professional Category: Book
List Price: $49.99 Buy New: $24.84 You Save: $25.15 (50%)
Buy New/Used from $19.70
Avg. Customer Rating:   (7 reviews) Sales Rank: 510594
Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown), English (Published) Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 496 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.6 Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 7 x 1.1
ISBN: 0321334221 Dewey Decimal Number: 005.4465 EAN: 9780321334220 ASIN: 0321334221
Publication Date: February 9, 2006 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description A Step-by-Step Guide to the Xcode Mac OS Development Environment Every copy of Mac OS X comes with Xcode, the powerful development suite that Apple uses to build applications ranging from Safari to iTunes. But because Xcode is complex and subtle, even experienced Mac programmers rarely take full advantage of it. Now, Mac developer Fritz Anderson has written the definitive introduction and guide to using Xcode to build applications with any Macintosh technology or language. Anderson helps you master Xcode's powerful text editor, industry-standard gcc compiler, graphical interactive debugger, mature UI layout and object linkage editor, and exceptional optimization tools. One step at a time, you'll develop a command-line utility, then use Xcode tools to evolve it into a full-fledged Cocoa application. Anderson provides expert guidance on development frameworks, source code management, Core Data modeling, localization, and much more. Coverage includes *Understanding Xcode workflow and the Mac OS X application lifecycle*Porting established legacy projects into Xcode*Using the Model-View-Controller design pattern to build robust graphical applications*Building static libraries and working with Xcode's build system*Making the most of bundles and package directories*Creating applications compatible with older versions of Mac OS X *Creating universal binaries to run on both Intel and PowerPC Macintoshes*Adding Spotlight searchability to data files*Leveraging Xcode's built-in support for unit testing*Using Xcode on makefile-based UNIX development projects Step Into Xcode's breadth, depth, and practical focus make it indispensable to every Mac developer: current Xcode users upgrading to Xcode 2.1, experienced Mac programmers migrating from CodeWarrior, UNIX/Linux programmers moving to Mac OS X, and even novices writing their first programs or scripts.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 2 more reviews...
  Poor Introductory Reference August 29, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I'm most of the way through this book and have been losing interest since the first chapter. This book suffers from 3 fatal flaws: incomplete instruction, nonexistent trouble shooting, and poor code design. The first is very frustraiting, if you learn by doing and try to write the code in the book instead of just looking at the included code, you will quickly find your code does not work because the author omitted entire functions from the book. When learning to walk you will stumble, good intro books should account for that and provide you with the means to pull yourself up. This book provides no help to handle problems and you will make many, with the incomplete information along with the general disconnected nature of objective-C & cocoa you, like me may find yourself spending most of your time with this book debugging rather then learning. Finally as a veteran programmer in Win32, Linux, & embedded systems, I found the author's software design sensibilities to be lacking. Functions seem shoved in to classes for little reason, simple data objects took on complex IO functionality; these poor practices are touted by the author as examples of good Mac programming.
In summary I cannot recommend this book, its shortcomings make it difficult to work with, and these difficulties make it nearly impossible to learn from this book.
  Not a good introduction to anything. March 1, 2008 4 out of 9 found this review helpful
I bought this book thinking that it might be a nice step by step tutorial for the Cocoa and XCode development platform. It turns out to be not much of an introduction to anything.
Maybe it is just a personality difference or a difference in my learning style versus the style of the book, but I really hated it. Right off the bat, I could not bring myself to care anything at all about the project for the book. I found the whole thing to be a big, confusing, dreadfully boring mess.
I can see that the book covers some interesting features of XCode. It is a shame that the book is not interesting at all for me. I could not sit and read it or get motivated to follow along. Of course, everyone is different. Maybe you will find it to be a real page turner for positive reasons.
Maybe down the road I will find that this book has some value as a reference. It is also possible that this is simply the worst book I've read so far on the subject, but I have to admit that it has a great cover!
  Lays a great foundation March 30, 2006 4 out of 16 found this review helpful
This book covers a lot of ground - great for beginning Xcoders, especially CodeWarrior converts. Not quite as in-depth as I thought it would be, based on the description, but well worth the price.
  solid IDE for Mac programmers March 22, 2006 8 out of 22 found this review helpful
Macintosh programmers live in a restricted world; a ghetto, perhaps. The nice features of the Mac user interface and operating system also tend to make it hard to find good programming tools. Luckily, Apple has gone a long way to addressing this with the promulgation of Xcode.
Within Xcode, you can program in various languages, C, Java and, notably, Objective C. The latter is really mostly confined nowadays to a Mac. Anderson shows that the Xcode IDE does much of what you would expect a current IDE to do. Syntax colouring. Easy compiling and linking. Plus the ability to stuff things (binaries and data) into a package. As one chapter explains, this is crucial if you plan on letting others use your code. Putting it all into one package makes the distribution and maintenance far easier. Where you should remember that a Mac will have many packages, and not just yours.
I have to say, though, that I find Eclipse (for Java programmers) to be a richer environment for coding than Xcode. But Eclipse is really only for Java.
  Lots of useful info. March 15, 2006 9 out of 13 found this review helpful
As to a recommendation, I'd say yes. Step into Xcode is most valuable to those getting started with Xcode, but even for people who have been using it for a little while you are sure to pick up a few tips and tricks.
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