Phil

Thank you for the suggestion. Unfortunately this IDE is not going to
be usable by either of us as work as our development machines are all
Linux boxes. Both XCode and AppCode are only available for OSX.
I own a Mac for my own personal stuff but am not allowed to use my own
machine at work for security reasons.

It seems to reinforce the point that I have only found usable
Objective-C IDEs on Mac O/S. It may stand to reason as that is where
the majority of people would use it. People building objective C on
Linux using GNUstep or other things might well just be too small of  a
base to expect an IDE to be developed for them.

On Jan 20, 3:28 pm, Phil Maskell <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> You mentioned:
>
> "I would not say that. He is bright enough and has a deep technical
> knowledge. I think he just has some extreme opinions. To be honest
> though, if XCode is the only GUI IDE (besides ProjectCenter which I
> mentioned doesn't seem to work for me) I know that can be used for
> writing Objective-C then why not use a console editor?  There are
> plenty advantages for Java but he is not a Java developer. "
>
> Give this a look -http://www.jetbrains.com/objc/
>
> Never used it as I haven't looked into obj C, but I use Intellij for Java
> and like it, this may be of use, not sure if its cross platform though (I
> guess its Java like Intellij, but may need some Mac libraries?). But he
> could run his build script from within it anyway, worth a look.
>
> Phil

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