Developer Tools

Apple has gone to great lengths to lure a new breed of developers to the Mac, offering environments for traditional C, C++, Objective-C (and recently Objective-C++), Java, and with the introduction of AppleScript Studio, AppleScripters can now harness their scripting knowledge to build Cocoa-based applications.

Installing the Developer Tools

You can quickly check to see if you have the Developer Tools installed. If you have a /Developer folder on your hard drive, you are ready to go. If not, you’ll need to install the tools either from the Developer Tools CD that came with your system or from a disk image you can download from the Apple Developer Connection (ADC) site.

The Developer Tools CD comes with every boxed set of Mac OS X (including Mac OS X Server), as well as with new Macs shipped from the factory with OS X. To install the tools, simply find the CD (it’s the gray one), put it into your CD-ROM drive, and double-click the Developer.mpkg file that will appear.

Note

If you didn’t receive a Developer Tools CD with your new Mac, you may find Developer.mpkg in /Applications/Installers/Developer Tools.

If you can’t find your Developer Tools CD, or if you received a Mac OS X upgrade package that didn’t include it (some of the free OS X 10.0 to 10.1 packages only came with one CD), you should go to the ADC member web site at http://connect.apple.com and download them.

ADC Membership has its privileges. There are many levels of membership available. The free Online ...

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