I don't want to take the time to learn Obj-C. I've spent 7+ years doing web application programming. Shouldn't there be a way to use the WebView and just write the whole app in javascript, pulling the files right from the resources of the project?
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look at the new o'reilly book on the matter |
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I have been using phonegap for a while and it seems to have the best results for me. I will post my experience in a week or so with a link to my app as well. |
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You can create an application without knowing any obj-C. The QuickConnectiPhone framework allows you to do this. Check out http://tetontech.wordpress.com for how to use it as well as other ways of doing what you have asked. |
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Check out PhoneGap at http://www.phonegap.com they claim it allows you to embed JavaScript, HTML and CSS into a native iPhone app. |
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For those doing this on iPhone 2.1 (maybe 2.0), you do NOT need to create any special services for local data storage. MobileSafari appears to support the HTML5/WHATWG SQL database API. This is the same API supported by recent versions of desktop Safari and Firefox. If you're using a toolkit like Dojo or ExtJS that offers a storage abstraction, your code should work on just about any modern browser, including MobileSafari. To test, open http://robertsanders.name/dev/stackoverflow/html5.html on your iPhone. If you open that page then look on the filesystem of a Jailbroken iPhone, you should see a database somewhere in /private/var/mobile/Library/WebKit/Databases/. There's even a directory of web-opened DBs there.
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I found the answer after searching around. Here's what I have done:
Note: I realize that Obj-C must not be that hard to learn. But since I already have this app existing in JS and I know it works in Safari this is a much faster dev cycle for me. Some day I'm sure I'll have to break down and learn Obj-C. A few other resources I found helpful: Calling Obj-C from javascript: http://tetontech.wordpress.com/2008/08/14/calling-objective-c-from-javascript-in-an-iphone-uiwebview/ Calling javascript from Obj-C: http://dominiek.com/articles/2008/7/19/iphone-app-development-for-web-hackers Reading files from application bundle: http://iphoneincubator.com/blog/tag/uiwebview |
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There not way to do this with the current apple API's. Your closest bet is to write a simple native iPhone app that embeds the webkit browser. That will let you browse your xhtml/js application locally. If you want to store data, you'll need to take it a step further and include a light weight http server that servers up your app and provides calls to store and retrieve data. Probably not an ideal solution for you, but possibly less work than a full Obj-C app. As a side note, Obj-C is fairly easy to learn. There are tons of examples in the SDK. The community is strong and will answer well put questions without hesitation. |
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I ran into this same problem. I already have a game written entirely in Javascript. I would love to make an iPhone friendly version, but Obj-C is an overkill. What I ended up doing was using the WebView to point to a special url of the iphone app. After thinking about it, I suppose I could just move those files to the app directory and run them locally. |
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You should have the native wrapper written in Objective C. This wrapper could contain really few lines of code (like, 10) necessary to create a WebView and navigate it to the given address in the internet (where your application resides). But in this case your application should be a full-featured web application (I mean, use not only the JavaScript, but also some HTML for markup). |
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