Two other helpful bits of advice:
First, in order to see the contents of the bundle in Xcode you need to set its type in the File Inspector Utility Pane, to "Application Bundle". You still won't be able to copy to and from via Xcode. You'll need to use Terminal but Xcode will update it immediately.
Second, in order to use resources in the bundle here's a helpful snippet...
NSString *bundlePath = [[NSBundle mainBundle] pathForResource:@"AquarianHarp" ofType:@"bundle"];
NSString *imageName = [[NSBundle bundleWithPath:bundlePath] pathForResource:@"trebleclef2" ofType:@"png"];
UIImage *myImage = [[UIImage alloc] initWithContentsOfFile:imageName];
As mentioned in my comment above, you needn't actually load the bundle (you can't as it's not executable) and the ofType
needs to match the case of your actual file for it to work on the device. It will work either way in simulator so don't be fooled by this red herring!
Finally, you don't need to put your resources in the "Resources" subfolder inside the bundle. It seems you can use an arbitrary layout but there may be unknown performance implications.