ABOUT ME

-

Today
-
Yesterday
-
Total
-
  • Books: Cocoa Programming For Mac
    카테고리 없음 2020. 2. 11. 06:46

    May 24, 2004 - More than two years ago we reviewed the first edition of the excellent book by Aaron Hillegass, 'Cocoa Programming for Mac OS X'. Nov 18, 2011 - This is the eBook version of the printed book. The best-selling introduction to Cocoa, once again updated to cover the latest Mac programming. May 9, 2008 - He says that 6000 copies of “Cocoa Programming for Mac OS X, 3rd. As you go through the book, you can ignore the difference between the.

    1. Books Cocoa Programming For Mac Os X Pdf
    2. Books Cocoa Programming For Mac Os X 5th Edition
    Books: Cocoa Programming For Mac

    Book Review: Cocoa® Programming for Mac® OS X, Third Edition by May 20, 2008 - 2:00 PM CST. Addison Wesley Professional started shipping the Third Edition of Cocoa Programming for Mac OS X by Aaron Hillegass this month. Hillegass’ book is considered my most to be the de-facto intro-to-OS X programming text. I own (and have now recycled) the first edition of the book and have gone through the majority of the Third Edition (at least reading-wise). Here’s my take on this latest incarnation.

    The Text At A Glance. Aaron has a great, teaching-writing style. You definitely get the feel of being in the classroom, learning right from the professor. The preface makes at least two, fairly substantial claims. First, that the nook covers the Objective-C language, Cocoa design patterns and how to use Xcode, Interface Builder and Instruments. And, second, that you will learn 80% of what you need to know to get started programming for the Mac.

    I have to agree with both claims as you will definitely learn a great deal of the fundamentals of the language and tools and that the book can be used as a reference post-read. This third edition has been updated to cover Leopard-only technologies (such as garbage collection and Objective-C 2.0) and does a decent job showing where to utilize the new language features and delves into the depths of intricacies of the new memory management facilities in Leopard (and how to code for both Tiger & Leopard). Covering tools like gdb and Instruments is an amazing thing to do, since many programmers are still rely solely on printf or (in the case of Mac programming) NSLog. The sample applications range from trivial to pretty neat & indicative of real-world Mac programming, error-logic and all. I especially like the challenges in the exercises, many of which have you modify example code, sometimes accompanied by the mantra: “This is hard, and you are not stupid.” If you are interested at all in programming for OS X or have programmed for the Mac and want to pick up some hints on how code specifically for features in Leopard, Aaron’s books is a must-buy.

    I’d definitely recommend keeping all of Apple’s updated information handy as it will fill in the 20% Aaron doesn’t cover and go a bit deeper as well. The Gory Details Here is a breakdown of the chapters and what each covers:.

    Chapter 1. Cocoa: What Is It? Title: Cocoa® Programming for Mac® OS X, Third Edition Publisher: Addison Wesley Professional Publish Date: May 05, 2008 Print ISBN-10: 0-321-50361-9 Print ISBN-13: 978-0-321-50361-9 eText ISBN-10: 0-321-56273-9 eText ISBN-13: 978-0-321-56273-9 Pages: 464 You can find it at (they even have a Kindle-ready version), and (most likely) at your favorite local bookstore. List price is $49.99 USD but you can find it in the low $30’s if you poke around. If you snagged a copy of the tome, drop a note in the comments with your take on the text. Charles I have to agree with Sravan.

    Although I think this is a great book; well set out and paced, I feel confused about Memory Management. I don’t know when or how to use it properly. I got my book two days ago and I am on Chapter 7. It is not boring, it really reels you in.

    A very good book for beginners. I had no experience with Cocoa or Objective-C when I started (although I am very skilled in C) and now I feel confident about writing code.

    Books Cocoa Programming For Mac Os X Pdf

    The challenges are just the right level of difficulty and when you use the material and examples covered from all chapters, they are very doable. I was actually hoping that the book would have something like these challenges as I feel they are fundamental for learning the concepts. The writing style is, as I said, captivating and assuring. It feels like an actual person is there guiding you, not like a reference document. I highly recommend this book. Sravan I just got this book the this week and i have gone through the first 7 chapters and find it very easy to use.

    I have good programming knowledge in the windows world especially with java (And c, c) and the apple introduction to objective c was too slow for me. I love the pace of this book.

    Books Cocoa Programming For Mac Os X 5th Edition

    I aim to do a chapter every two days – one for the chapter and one for the challenges. I am loving the challenges as they allow me to internalize the concepts shown in the book. Only one comment – with iPhone SDK not supporting garbage collection, i would prefer a bit more meat into memory management the old style. I am not sure if what i am doing is correct or not from a memory management perspective.

    I tried doing the dealloc classes for a few more examples, i keep running into the problem of the objects being released prematurely. I think i dont understand that part well.

    Cocoa programming for os x

    Other than that, i think this is a great book for a first timer to MAC. Given all the currently shipping Macs now have 2+ cores, threading MUST be included these days. Yes, I realize it can be complicated, and no I haven’t read this book as of yet. But having programmed for the past 15 years in multi threading environments, I can attest to how brutally painful it is to use (let alone work on / fix) programs which obviously haven’t taking threading into account. Even relatively new products (Aperture!) which by all accounts should have done it right given their age, don’t. So lets, please!, change this thought of “threads are too hard for beginners” and find a way to set this world up to use the 16+ cores we’re soon to have. Comments are closed.

    Cocoa Programming for OS X: The Big Nerd Ranch Guide, 5th Edition by Aaron Hillegass English 2015 ISBN: 556 Pages True PDF, EPUB 37 MB 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 two most commonly used Mac developer tools: Xcode and Instruments. They also cover the Swift language, basic application architecture, and the major design patterns of Cocoa. Examples are illustrated with exemplary code, written in the idioms of the Cocoa community, to show you how Mac programs should be written. After reading this book, you will know enough to understand and utilize Apple’s online documentation for your own unique needs.

    Cocoa

    And you will know enough to write your own stylish code.

Designed by Tistory.