What is a remarkable pain is that often Apple lets you update the OS on iOS devices, but will not let you revert the OS on the same devices.
This bit me when iOS updated to 5.1 which prevented any developer on Snow Leopard from building to the device and at the same time, Apple prevented reverting the device to 5.0.1.
This bit both me and my other programmer earlier this year when we were preparing a deliverable to our CTO, leaving us with 300+ dollar paperweights until we replaced our devices or were forced to upgrade our OS.
We can not assume that the programmer will have the desired version of iOS, or if Apple will even allow installation of the desired OS onto the devices.
Why is the 4.3 simulator no longer supported in 4.4?
It's lovely little surprises like this that can really leave the developers in a bad spot. On Aug 2, 2012, at 1:38 PM, David Duncan wrote: On Aug 2, 2012, at 1:34 AM, Vyacheslav Karamov < email@hidden> wrote: I had 4.3 simulator running when simulator's installer was started. So installed them, quited simulator and ran XCode. Ah yes, I have installed XCode from AppStore.
My understanding is the iOS 4.3 Simulator does not work on Mountain Lion (going by comments on the developer forums). You will need to do your debugging with iOS 4.3 on a real device (which you should already have for your testing anyway).
Do not post admin requests to the list. They will be ignored.
Xcode-users mailing list (email@hidden)
Help/Unsubscribe/Update your Subscription:
This email sent to email@hidden
|