December 2010
Intermediate to advanced
288 pages
5h 50m
English
This journey started with the big picture of iOS app design, moved into the primary tools and methods for app design work, and has spent the last several chapters detailing various content-focused approaches to designing apps with web standards and NimbleKit’s Objective-C code framework.
So what do you do when you are about to complete an app and start thinking about testing, distributing, and selling it?
That’s what this chapter is about. One of the major reasons to “go native” and design an Objective-C iOS app is Apple’s iTunes software and distribution channel. iTunes Connect is your interface with Apple’s digital marketplace, and the iOS Dev Center is where you’ll find the technical resources you ...
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