Paul Solt
iPhone Development Talk
Today I gave a presentation on iPhone Development at RIT for the Computer Science Community (CSC).If you enjoyed it let me know. I’m looking into starting an informal iPhone Dev workshop for more topics.
Here are the slides and Xcode projects:
Slides: iPhone Development – Paul Solt
1. Demo: Hello World Pusher: Foo2
2. Demo: Touch Input: Stalker
3. Demo: Robot Remote Control: See my previous post
*The Touch Input demo was based on a demo given during the Stanford iPhone courses available on iTunes here.
Resources:
- Cocoa Programming for Mac OS X by Aaron Hillegass (Third Edition)
- Stanford iPhone Course (cs193p.stanford.edu)
- Search “iPhone Application Programming” in iTunes
- Beginning iPhone 3 Development: Exploring the iPhone SDK by Jeff LaMarche
- iPhone Dev Center
5 Responses to iPhone Development Talk
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@PaulSolt
- RT @flexibits: Happy 1st Birthday, Fantastical! http://t.co/bIcVDgbZ 2012/05/18
- @IAmReynolds thanks, I think it's the color choice that made it look good. Gradient colors similar to the line color. 2012/05/17
- @rwenderlich I'm interested if this is still an option. I did a text-based risk game back in high school. It could work for an iPad app. 2012/05/16
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animation App Store Artwork Evolution Boost Boot Camp C++ cross platform development Dual Monitors function pointers Gears of War 2 gestures git GLUT inheritance iOS iPad iPhone Macbook Pro Mac OS X MacPorts member functions Objective-C OCUnit OpenGL player/stage polymorphism presentation programming remote control RIT SCM slides static methods STL svn 1.6 tdd testable code testing unit testing version control Windows XP Xbox 360 Xcode xcode 3.1.2








Damn! Missed it.
Bing “The Objective-C 2.0 Programming Language”? Did you get some reaction for this?
haha, I got some laughs!
Wow, do you think they’ll offer classes on iPhone (or even Mac) development anytime soon?
@Joe Pasqualetti
There was an informal course that I got wind of last quarter at RIT. Beyond that I’ve given a couple of presentations and did an independent study with iPhone development in the Computer Science department.