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silverf1re

macrumors regular
Original poster
Mar 3, 2011
211
8
NDA violation, EULA agreement violation, Terms and Services agreement violation. So since that is all out of the way is there a service out there that does not only add your device to their list of UDID's for download the beta iOS but a service that actually sets you up to be able to develop and deploy apps you your personal devices? I would love to get into this Swift programming but im not going to pay apple 100 bucks a year to strengthen their no language. Basically I don't want to make money of my apps. Hell I don't even want them on the app store. I just want my personal iPad to display "hello world" when I open an app I wrote.
 
NDA violation, EULA agreement violation, Terms and Services agreement violation. So since that is all out of the way is there a service out there that does not only add your device to their list of UDID's for download the beta iOS but a service that actually sets you up to be able to develop and deploy apps you your personal devices? I would love to get into this Swift programming but im not going to pay apple 100 bucks a year to strengthen their no language. Basically I don't want to make money of my apps. Hell I don't even want them on the app store. I just want my personal iPad to display "hello world" when I open an app I wrote.

You could just stick to the simulator. If it's for playing around with Swift and not preparing an app to ship as soon as iOS 8 is out I see no need to enroll.
 
You could just stick to the simulator. If it's for playing around with Swift and not preparing an app to ship as soon as iOS 8 is out I see no need to enroll.

Please correct me if I'm wrong but I recall reading you still need Xcode 6, thus first enrolling for those $99/year.

No way of playing with Swift inside Xcode 5.1

I'd love to start playing with Swift; unfortunately not before paying :(
 
You could just stick to the simulator. If it's for playing around with Swift and not preparing an app to ship as soon as iOS 8 is out I see no need to enroll.

That's true. Its just makes seance in my mind that if you want to spark interest in your brand new product the barrier for entry should be low. But I guess if your apple it doesn't matter.
 
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Please correct me if I'm wrong but I recall reading you still need Xcode 6, thus first enrolling for those $99/year.

No way of playing with Swift inside Xcode 5.1

I'd love to start playing with Swift; unfortunately not before paying :(

Ah, you're correct. That sucks =/
 
Please correct me if I'm wrong but I recall reading you still need Xcode 6, thus first enrolling for those $99/year.

No way of playing with Swift inside Xcode 5.1

I'd love to start playing with Swift; unfortunately not before paying :(

Ya they need an xcode express like Visual Studio has :)
 
Ya they need an xcode express like Visual Studio has :)

The current version of Xcode is free. The beta version of Xcode is free, but you have to be a paying developer, first.

It does seem to me that Apple could allow beta versions of Xcode and the SDKs and everything to be given to free developers too...

but that's Apple's choice, and we just have to live with it. If you need it, you'll pay for it, and if you don't, you'll sit and wait like anyone else.
 
If all you want is to see a program you wrote type "Hello world" from your iPad, you should look in the iOS App Store.

I know that techBASIC ($15) is capable of this, and there may be other programming languages that only run from iOS.
https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/techbasic/id470781862?mt=8

techBASIC is neat because it can also read BLE (Bluetooth Low Energy) sensors, which are pretty easy to buy (or make) these days.
 
That's true. Its just makes seance in my mind that if you want to spark interest in your brand new product the barrier for entry should be low. But I guess if your apple it doesn't matter.

The barrier to entry is low.
Most hobbies you'll invest more than $99 a year.
 
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If all you want is to see a program you wrote type "Hello world" from your iPad, you should look in the iOS App Store.

I know that techBASIC ($15) is capable of this, ...

There are other Basic interpreters in the App store that are free apps (plus more apps for other languages, such a Lisp and Lua).
 
Just wait until September when XCode 6 (and therefore swift) become free for anyone on the Mac App Store. How does Apple benefit from putting out a piece of software 3 months earlier to people who just want to write Hello, World!
 
Just wait until September when XCode 6 (and therefore swift) become free for anyone on the Mac App Store. How does Apple benefit from putting out a piece of software 3 months earlier to people who just want to write Hello, World!

September is *very* unlikely. They said fall and that lasts a lot longer...
 
September is *very* unlikely. They said fall and that lasts a lot longer...

Maybe October then, as that's the latest that all the rumor mills speculate that the a new iPhone model will start shipping. Can't have an iPhone 6 without iOS 8. Can't ship iOS 8 on new devices without undated apps for it (more than a few apps currently in the Store will be broken by the OS update). Developers can't submit iOS 8 apps (new or fixed) without a released SDK (we might get a 1 week head-start if lucky). So the SDK and new Xcode will be out by then. If it's a rush, then perhaps the Xcode release after that will be finally the reliable one for everybody to jump on.
 
...you don't have to pay $99, you just have to wait until fall.

His point was that one cannot run one's code on an actual iPad (or any other iP* device) unless one pays the annual fee. This is true now, and will be true in the fall, too. That is, the public release of Xcode 6 will indeed be free in the fall, but it will still be unable to run code on an actual iP* device unless you pay the fee (or jailbreak).

Unless you're suggesting that Apple is going to add the "run on actual device" capability to the free developer account in the fall.
 
He can run it in the simulator just fine...there's not really much of a difference if he just wants to display Hello World. Besides, if it was truly important he would pay the $99 program to get access to a lot of the developer resources.
 
A public. Beta for Yosemite will arrive in the summer. There's a small chance Xcode 6 may also become available as a beta. Just wait a little, the summer is almost here.
 
Very unlikely considering the current state of Swift. Imo it's a wonder when it's finished in time for fall...

Several developers have reported the compiler is very solid, the only issues occur with Playground and the Editor, which should be corrected on time by launch day.
The language seems very powerful and yet simple. The Playground is a huge plus to Xcode.
 
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