RE: Farewell to Xcode 3.2.6 ?
RE: Farewell to Xcode 3.2.6 ?
- Subject: RE: Farewell to Xcode 3.2.6 ?
- From: Lee Ann Rucker <email@hidden>
- Date: Sat, 18 Oct 2014 17:02:11 +0000
- Thread-topic: Farewell to Xcode 3.2.6 ?
Check my email address - running Fusion while I'm developing it is a bit awkward for me ;) But I'm glad you are all liking it!
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From: Igor Delovski [email@hidden]
Sent: Saturday, October 18, 2014 2:55 AM
To: Lee Ann Rucker
Cc: Clark S. Cox III; Xcode-users Users
Subject: Re: Farewell to Xcode 3.2.6 ?
Well, VMWare and 10.6 is the way to go. On my older MBA I even had a non-server version running but now I forgot how I did it and since it's not quite legal to do it, on my latest MBA I have 10.6 server in VMWare and 3.2.6 works just fine.
I have always worked with multiple windows floating around so in modern Finder I have toolbars turned off and with some discipline and stubbornness I can have separate windows in the latest Xcode for global search, debugging, console and editing.
Oh, and I even have SheepShaver in that virtual 10.6 so I can run ResEdit when I need it. What's cooler than that?
Sent from my iPad
> On 17 Oct 2014, at 21:38, Lee Ann Rucker <email@hidden> wrote:
>
>
>> On Oct 17, 2014, at 11:33 AM, Clark S. Cox III <email@hidden> wrote:
>>
>>
>>> On Oct 17, 2014, at 06:29, Paul Russell <email@hidden> wrote:
>>>
>>> I've managed to keep Xcode 3.2.6 going for legacy projects until today - it survived every upgrade up to OS X 10.9, but Yosemite seems to be the end. Before I resign myself to upgrading a bunch of old projects to Xcode 6, I don't suppose anyone has managed to get Xcode 3.2.6 working in OS X 10.10 ? I can get it to launch, but it throws a bunch of errors when you try to open a project.
>>
>> I would recommend getting VMWare, installing 10.6 on it and running it that way. Even just going back one version, that is what I do (i.e. I only ever run Xcode 5.x in a VM running OS X 10.9).
>>
>> Xcode 3.2.6 has *never* been supported on anything other than OS X 10.6; the fact that so many people have been hacking it up to work on 3 unsupported major OSes amazes me (and frightens me a little bit) :)
>>
>> —
>
> No hacking required; it just works on 10.9 - at least, if all you need it to do is provide access to your source files; I don’t use it for building. And until I find another IDE that works the way it does, I’ll keep using it.
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