I have Stephen Kochan’s book, “Programming in Objective-C 2.0” and I believe it is the best place to start.
I am working my way through the chapters and example code. I’m on Chapter 4 now.
I have Stephen Kochan’s book, “Programming in Objective-C 2.0” and I believe it is the best place to start.
I am working my way through the chapters and example code. I’m on Chapter 4 now.
bakari its updating my 43 things list
The Unofficial Apple Weblog has published a nice resource of books and other material on learning Objective-C.
http://www.tuaw.com/2009/01/15/starting-out-with-objective-c/
bakari its updating my 43 things list
I’m starting my semester long program to learn Objective-C, but I won’t be taking a class to do it. I’m using what looks like a great series of books on learning C programming. The first book in the series is titled,Learn C on the Mac , by Dave Mark (Apress publisher.) Learning the programming doesn’t seem as difficult as it might appear, so I think I will be able to do it.
I have all the books I need now I just need to go through them. I have the second edition of Cocoa Programming for Mac OSX and Programming in Objective-C. The plan is learn the Obj-C then make something worthwhile on my Mac.
to reading become an xcoder, i finished my first test app-thingy a few weeks ago. for the interested, details and download link are “here”http://miniondesign.com/solo, and i wrote a little more about it here.
the syntax of the language is easy to grasp, and it’s really just C with a bunch of brackets, so i feel like i understand the basics of it. the hard part is everything else.
Ok so i want to get an iPhone when my current phone contract runs out but before I do that I want to write some cool applications for it in the sdk so that I can have loads of cool things to do when I get it
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San Sebastián
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ghostDancer asks,
“how did u do it, self-teaching with books or other way?”
— 4 years ago |
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