You used to be able to simply copy in the SDK folder i to the right spot and 
Xcode could find it. This worked for me to build an iOS 6 project in newer 
Xcode versions which didn’t come with it.

Naturally, this may it may not work depending on how far apart the Xcode and 
SDK versions are. I do know that the formats have changed very little over 
time, the bigger difference is their location. You can find info online about 
doing this, search for something als “using older SDK with newer Xcode”.

enohp ym morf tnes
-----------
Dan Wilcox
danomatika.com
robotcowboy.com


> On Jun 14, 2019, at 7:05 PM, Alexandre Torres Porres <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> 
> 
>> Em qui, 13 de jun de 2019 às 18:17, Dan Wilcox <[email protected]> 
>> escreveu:
>> You don't unless you have the 10.6 SDK installed and it somehow works with 
>> your version of Xcode.
> 
> Seems 10.6 SDK works up to XCode 4.3, and I can't install XCode 4.3 in the OS 
> 10.8 which I was able to downgrade to (only Xcode 4.4+)
> 
> I just realised now that it seems I won't be able to install 10.6.8 because 
> macs do not seem to be able to install any previous OS versions that they 
> came out with. I'm not surprise to learn that, I'm just surprised I didn't 
> know! I'm still trying to learn more about this. Can anyone confirm this?
> 
> The machine I was able to install 10.8 actually came out with 10.7, but I 
> wasn't lucky installing 10.7 on it. And since I actually wanted to install 
> 10.6.8 as my friend's computer, I guess I'll have to give it up.
> 
> The other way around I can think of is by getting a virtual machine running 
> 10.6.8 - I've seen some torrent images for that.
> 
> cheers
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