While it is true that knowing Objective C is a very good way to write
programs with Cocoa interfaces it is not the only way. The Apple
development systems supports writing programs with Cocoa interfaces in
Java, Perl, Ruby and even AppeScript. It is possible to write even
very complex programs, of r example my DTBmaker program is don in a
combination of Perl and AppleScript with a Cocoa interface.
Greg Kearney
535 S. Jackson St.
Casper, Wyoming 82601
307-224-4022
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Oct 9, 2007, at 3:25 AM, Jude DaShiell wrote:
cocoa is a standard not a language. First if you don't already have
one get yourself an apple id. You'll need the serial number of your
machine to get that so have that available when you go to make your
apple id. Once you have your apple id, you get access to the apple
knowledge base on the apple web sites. To get into development and
be sure you'll be doing stuff that's compliant you'll need an apple
developer account and then you'll need objective C and all
dependencies of Objective C installed on your computer to develop
with cocoa compliance. Hope this helps.
On Mon, 8 Oct 2007, michael babcock using a mac! wrote:
hi;
whair might one learn how to get started programming in coco the
language for apps that work well with voiceover.
thanks for any help!
thanks
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