No NDA change from last year I can see so we’re free to discuss within the bounds of good old common sense, no **** required.
I don’t have a lot to say yet however - read the release notes, like the look of typed collections in ObjC and how that’s translated into various methods which used to return NSArray() now returning a typed one, I’ve wanted that for years. I see that’s made it into lots of method return signatures in objC and Swift. Still trying to work out what all the Swift 2.0 changes are. Happy the programs were merged into one, I was just about to drop the OSX one as $99 a year I got no benefit from spending. Don’t care about watchkit at all, nor streaming music. Until some of the real sessions start it’s just release notes. You get much more meat from the sessions to hang on the bones. I won’t comment on the new dev forums. > On 10 Jun 2015, at 02:07, Jens Alfke <[email protected]> wrote: > > With all the new goodies announced yesterday, and new releases of Xcode and > multiple OSs, I’m surprised I haven’t seen discussion of them here or on > cocoa-dev. Which makes me wonder whether the newly-updated Apple developer > agreement (that I clicked through without reading) reinstates the dreaded > F***ing NDA, preventing us from talking about new stuff. > > I hope not! I hope everyone’s just too busy downloading and reading and > experimenting and filing bug reports. I’m ready to ask questions & share > experiences, as long as The Man isn’t going to oppress me for it… > > —Jens _______________________________________________ Do not post admin requests to the list. They will be ignored. Xcode-users mailing list ([email protected]) Help/Unsubscribe/Update your Subscription: https://lists.apple.com/mailman/options/xcode-users/archive%40mail-archive.com This email sent to [email protected]
