I believe Rhodes compiles down to binary code.

- Matt

On Thu, Jun 25, 2009 at 5:41 PM, Jim Rea <[email protected]> wrote:

>
>
> On Jun 25, 2009, at 1:04 PM, Matt Aimonetti wrote:
>
> > Interpretated code isn't allowed on the iphone, so shipping an app
> > with VM wouldn't be allowed in the app store :(
>
> I think they've allowed some apps that include both the VM and the
> interpreted code, if the interpreted code can't be changed or swapped
> out by the end user. What they don't want is to give users the ability
> to bypass the Apple app store. In fact, if the VM and interpreted code
> are bundled together, how would Apple even know that was happening?
> You don't give them your source code.
>
> At the LA Ruby conference there was a talk about a Ruby environment
> that allows a developer to target a bunch of mobile platforms,
> including the iPhone. This environment is already available and they
> listed several iPhone apps that were already in the app store.
>
> <http://www.rhomobile.com/products/rhodes>
>
> Here's what the Rhodes FAQ says about this:
>
> > The iPhone development terms do not disallow interpreted languages.
> > They disallow interpreting code that has been downloaded independent
> > of both Apple's official distributions channels (i.e. not contained
> > in the app bundle) and Apple's own code.
>
>
> BTW - I have no connection with Rhodes and haven't tried it myself,
> just saw the talk.
>
> Jim
>
>
>
> >
>

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