iPhone SDK Development
The Pragmatic Programmers (Verlag)
978-1-934356-25-8 (ISBN)
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Packing the power of desktop applications into a small mobile device, the iPhone SDK offers developers the ability to create dynamic, visually-appealing, and highly-capable mobile applications, using the same APIs and tools that Apple uses for its own applications. However, harnessing that power means learning new tools, new APIs, and even a whole new programming language. "iPhone SDK Development" is a pragmatic guide to get you started developing applications for iPhone and iPod touch.With it, you'll get a complete understanding of the tools and techniques needed to succeed on the platform: use the XCode IDE to manage your source code, images, sounds, database files, and other application resources, building your app and deploying it onto your own device for testing; develop your user interface the visual, code-free way, with Interface Builder; master the iPhone's unique user interface components, including tables, tab bars, navigation bars, and the multi-touch interface; connect your iPhone to the outside world with networking, exploit the power of a relational database with SQLite, and rock out with first-class support for audio and video; make use of the iPhone's unique mobile APIs, like geolocation and the motion-sensing accelerometer; use XCode's powerful performance and debugging tools to eliminate memory leaks, zombies, and other hazards; and, understand the process for packaging your application for end-user distribution through Apple's App Store.
With explanations of the big picture and an eye to the little details that you'll need, "iPhone SDK Development" will help you succeed on today's most important mobile platform.
Bill Dudney is a software developer and entrepreneur currently building software for the Mac. Bill started his computing career on a NeXT cube with a magneto-optical drive running NeXTStep 0.9. Over the years, Bill migrated into the Java world, where he worked for years on building cool enterprise software. But he never forgot his roots and how much fun it was to write software that did cool things for normal people. Bill is back to AppKit to stay. You can follow him on his blog at http://bill.dudney.net/roller/objc.Chris Adamson the editor of java.net, and was formerly editor of ONJava.com. He is the author of QuickTime for Java: A Developer's Notebook and co-author of Swing Hacks. He is also a software consultant, in the form of Subsequently and Furthermore, Inc., specializing in Java, Mac OS X, and media development. He blogs on digital media software development at [Time code];. He wrote his first Java applet in 1996 on a 16 MHz black-and-white PowerBook 160 with the little-seen Sun MacJDK 1.0. In a previous career, he was a Writer / Associate Producer at CNN Headline News, and over the years, he has managed to own eleven and a half Macs.
Erscheint lt. Verlag | 17.11.2009 |
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Zusatzinfo | Illustrations |
Verlagsort | Raleigh |
Sprache | englisch |
Maße | 192 x 229 mm |
Gewicht | 874 g |
Themenwelt | Informatik ► Weitere Themen ► Hardware |
Informatik ► Weitere Themen ► Smartphones / Tablets | |
ISBN-10 | 1-934356-25-5 / 1934356255 |
ISBN-13 | 978-1-934356-25-8 / 9781934356258 |
Zustand | Neuware |
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