Re: What are your top desired improvements in Xcode ?
Re: What are your top desired improvements in Xcode ?
- Subject: Re: What are your top desired improvements in Xcode ?
- From: Laurence Harris <email@hidden>
- Date: Sat, 17 Feb 2007 15:26:58 -0500
On Feb 17, 2007, at 7:01 AM, Ruslan Zasukhin wrote:
On 17/2/07 1:09 PM, "Laurence Harris" <email@hidden> wrote:
I'd say AS FAST and AS SMALL as CW or at least Visual.
I think it is if you have enough processors working on it. ;-)
Actually I have mean not speed of compilation,
But the size and speed of compiled code.
Oh.
Actually personally me worry about size most of all.
It is about 2 times bigger of CW code.
CodeWarrior used some caching to achieve its speed, but as I
understand it that mechanism prevented them from doing multithreaded
compiles. So CW could run circles around Xcode on a single processor,
but add a processor and Xcode could use it to compile faster while CW
will compile at the same speed as before.
Right, but you talk about speed of compilation.
Why are we having this thread?
May be because this allow to see where GOOD or GREAT product have
room for
improvement? :-)
If you want changes in Xcode you need to file requests for them in
Radar. Telling everyone on the list what you want does not put your
wishes into any official queue for consideration. Furthermore, I'm
sure the feature set for Xcode 3 is fixed at this point, so anything
you and others are requesting that isn't already in Xcode 3 (and some
of it is) probably won't be considered for implementation before the
next major or semi-major release. And finally, with Xcode 3 so close
to public release, it would make more sense to wait a few more weeks,
see what Xcode 3 brings to the table, and *then* start making your
wish list for the next release. In short, it seems pointless for a
bunch of people to be dumping their old wish lists out on the list
right now.
I think nobody here is not going offend XCODE team.
Yeah, that just shows how much *you* know. LOL
First, the Xcode team works hard, and I don't think they appreciate
comments that insinuate they aren't because some basic bug is still
around.
Second, you must not be reading Chris Espinosa's monthly reminder to
the list, which ends with:
"The C language is case-sensitive. Compilers are case-sensitive.
The Unix command line, ufs, and nfs file systems are case-sensitive.
I'm case-sensitive too, especially about product names. The IDE is
called Xcode. Big X, little c. Not XCode or xCode or X-Code.
Remember that now."
It's not XCODE, it's Xcode. ;-)
Larry
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