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Is there any way to tinker with the iPhone SDK on a Windows machine? Are there plans for an iPhone SDK version for Windows?

The only other way I can think of doing this is to run a Mac VM image on a VMWare server running on Windows, although I'm not too sure how legal this is.

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42 Answers 42

538

It's certainly possible to develop on a Windows machine, in fact, my first application was exclusively developed on the old Dell Precision I had at the time :)

There are three routes;

  1. Install OSx86 (aka iATKOS / Kalyway) on a second partition/disk and dual boot.
  2. Run Mac OS X Server under VMWare (Mac OS X 10.7 (Lion) onwards, read the update below).
  3. Use a framework and/or toolset, which allows developing on Windows, like Delphi XE4 with the mac-in-cloud service, which can build without MacOS device need. This is a commercial toolset, but the component and lib support is growing.

    Other honorable mentions are Flutter, Xamarin and similar; which may at end need actual MacOS device for final build (but you can test on Android till then, as they're cross-platform).

The first route requires modifying (or using a pre-modified) image of Leopard that can be installed on a regular PC. This is not as hard as you would think, although your success/effort ratio will depend upon how closely the hardware in your PC matches that in Mac hardware - e.g. if you're running a Core 2 Duo on an Intel Motherboard, with an NVidia graphics card you are laughing. If you're running an AMD machine or something without SSE3 it gets a little more involved.

If you purchase (or already own) a version of Leopard then this is a gray area since the Leopard EULA states you may only run it on an "Apple Labeled" machine. As many point out if you stick an Apple sticker on your PC you're probably covered.

The second option is more costly. The EULA for the workstation version of Leopard prevents it from being run under emulation and as a result, there's no support in VMWare for this. Leopard server, however, CAN be run under emulation and can be used for desktop purposes. Leopard server and VMWare are expensive, however.

If you're interested in option 1) I would suggest starting at Insanelymac and reading the OSx86 sections.

I do think you should consider whether the time you will invest is going to be worth the money you will save though. It was for me because I enjoy tinkering with this type of stuff and I started during the early iPhone betas, months before their App Store became available.

Alternatively, you could pick up a low-spec Mac Mini from eBay. You don't need much horsepower to run the SDK and you can always sell it on later if you decide to stop development or buy a better Mac.

Update: You cannot create a Mac OS X Client virtual machine for OS X 10.6 and earlier. Apple does not allow these Client OSes to be virtualized. With Mac OS X 10.7 (Lion) onwards, Apple has changed its licensing agreement in regards to virtualization. Source: VMWare KnowledgeBase

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  • OSX runs in a VM, so in theory it is possible. However, there are a few problems. Getting networking support in a VM (I'm talking about VMWare) for OSX is extremely hard. Also, the whole thing is going to be very slow, and I don't think it's a case of throwing RAM at it. Dec 18, 2008 at 23:45
  • @DennisPalmer I wouldn't recommand this buy as the cheap Intel Core 2 Duo Mac Minis are slow and generally shipped without keyboard + mouse. I think that for 650$ you can get a really cool Macbook (pro or air) with a 4 Gb of memory.
    – Zakaria
    Oct 28, 2012 at 11:31
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    I'd just like to point out that using VMWare ESX is free so long as you don't have more than 32 GB of RAM, you answer says that running VMWare is very expensive :/
    – Goulash
    May 16, 2013 at 15:23
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    No offense, but this sounds like a lot more trouble than it's worth. Old Macs are cheap on eBay and can run Xcode just fine.
    – sudo
    Jun 3, 2014 at 2:36
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    Use VirtualBox instead of VMWare since it's free. you may face little trouble syncing your device with VirtualBox for transferring the app to iPhone. in such a case, you can use diawi.com for transferring ipa.
    – Jake
    Mar 15, 2021 at 7:46
197

Xamarin is a solid choice. It was purchased by Microsoft and is now built directly into Visual Studio. You code in C#. With all the updates and features they are adding, you can do everything but submit to the App Store from Windows, even compile, build and deploy to an iOS device.

For games, Unity 3D is a great option. The editor is free to use for development, and even for distribution (if you have less than 100K USD in annual revenue). Unity supports iOS, Android and most other platforms. It may be possible to use Unity's "Cloud Build" feature to avoid having to use a Mac for deployment, although by default Unity actually spits out an Xcode project when building for iOS.

Other options:

PhoneGap (html/javascript) also works. It isn't quite as nice for gaming, but it's pretty decent for regular GUI applications.

Flutter (dart) is a free cross platform mobile app development framework from Google. Write your code in Dart.

React Native (javascript) is another popular cross-platform framework created by Facebook.

Note that: for all of these options, all or most of the development can be done on Windows, but a MacOS device is still required to build a binary for submission to the App Store. One option is to get a cheap MAC Mini to do your final build.

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  • I'm using Airplay to develop a cross-platform game. The good news they're probably fully compliant with the new iPhone OS 4.0 terms and conditions. See airplaysdk.com/node/672
    – hiddentao
    May 18, 2010 at 11:55
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    Phonegap is great, but you can't develop your app entirely on a Windows PC and then just sign it on the iMac and hope for the best. Unless your app is of the HelloWorld variety, you really need to test and debug.
    – Wytze
    Mar 16, 2012 at 8:25
  • 4
    There's a Visual Studio extension called Nomad which does support developing entirely on your PC by pushing the PhoneGap builds out to a cloud service. May 14, 2012 at 14:29
  • 3
    I don't believe Marmalade is free anymore, the licence terms have changed.
    – Jamie
    Feb 12, 2013 at 13:37
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    Xamarian cannot be used unless there is some MAC PC on the network
    – user586399
    May 26, 2016 at 3:05
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If you have a jailbroken iPhone, you can install the iphone-gcc toolchain onto the iPhone through Cydia and that way you can just compilie the apps on the iPhone. Apps that are developed this way can still be submitted to the App Store.

And although Mr Valdez said it is a grey area (which it is), jailbreaking is incredibly easy and pretty much risk free. Yes, it voids your warrenty but you can just do a restore and they will never know.

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  • 19
    Just updating: Jailbreaking no longer voids your warranty, at least not in the U.S.
    – sudo
    Jun 3, 2014 at 2:37
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    @9000 Have a source? Although jailbreaking is no longer a violation of the DCMA (something Apple never enforced anyway), and may or may not void the warrenty (it is purposefully vague), it doese violate the EULA and apple will deny service on a jailbroken device support.apple.com/kb/HT3743
    – Josh Hunt
    Jun 4, 2014 at 3:08
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    How can they deny service if you restore the device to its pre-jailbroken state using iTunes - Restore? They cannot detect that it was once jailbroken
    – JoelFan
    Nov 24, 2014 at 14:42
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    @JoelFan iOS might have the same thing as Android does; a 'flash ticker'. This is stored in NVRAM and increments every time system is wiped, meaning that it's possible to detect if it's been flashed or rooted. iOS devices may have the same thing (in fact, I'd be surprised if they don't).
    – AStopher
    Oct 15, 2015 at 16:12
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    I refuse to Google Mr Valdez. If someone can tell us I'd be obliged.
    – Harry Ninh
    Oct 3, 2016 at 9:07
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Most of "so called Windows solutions for iOS development without Mac" require Mac at the end just to sign and send to app store. I checked a few, not all though (who has the time?)

At the end it's just too much trouble to learn "their super special easy way to program iOS without Objective-C", they have lots of bugs. Really the goal they are setting is unachievable in my view.

Also a lot of time they make you use Objective-C equivalent statements simply in another language. They kind of look the same but there are always subtle differences that you have to learn on top of obj-c. Which also makes even less sense, because now instead of learning less you have to learn more. So where is the gain? Also they cost a lot, because they are very hard to develop.

Many lack any debugging abilities whatsoever.

In my honest opinion, if you are a hard-core iOS developer then for sure buy the best Mac and learn objective-c. It's expensive and takes time, but if it's your path, it's worth it.

For an occasional use, it's just easier to rent a remote Mac service, like XCodeClub.com

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    I am not familiar enough with PhoneGap to write a review but I like the idea: cross-platform Apps written with the wide-spread techniques HTML5+JavaScript.
    – Ignitor
    Oct 28, 2012 at 13:53
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    [VirtualMacOSX.com][1] have plans for xCode development, from (as of now) $10 a month. I am sure others have too. [1]: virtualmacosx.com/index.php/xcode-plans May 6, 2013 at 14:58
  • I had no idea this service even existed. I just want to explore and play with it and was about to give up for now doing all these crazy workarounds, but this is so much easier. Great tip! Aug 3, 2015 at 17:06
  • "now [...] you have to learn more. Also they cost a lot [...]" ..... "buy the best Mac and learn objective-c. It's expensive and takes time [...]" Conclusion: iOS development is in either case expensive and takes time. ;) Apr 18, 2018 at 8:50
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The SDK is only available on OS X, forcing you to use a mac. If you don't want to purchase a mac you can either run OS X on a virtual machine on your windows box, or you can install OS X on your PC.

In my experience the virtual machine solution is unusably slow (on a core2 duo laptop with 2G ram). If you feel like trying it search for the torrent. It's probably not worthwhile.

The other option is to install OS X on your PC, commonly referred to as a hackintosh. Hackintoshes work quite well - my friend just sold his mac because his Dell quad core hackintosh was actually much faster than the apple hardware (and cost about 1/3).

Of course both of these options are likely counter to some licensing scheme, so proceed at your own risk.

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  • 2
    hackintosh info gets outdated pretty easily, it is better to follow the sites that are dedicated to the subject (like osxlatitude for dell models)
    – prusswan
    Oct 2, 2014 at 7:26
57

You can use WinChain

Quoting the project page:

It's the easiest way to build the iPhone toolchain on a Windows XP/Vista computer, which in turn, can take Objective-C source code that you write using their UIKit Headers (included with winChain) and compile it into an application that you can use on your iPhone.

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  • 1
    so is this free to use and you can develop ios apps that you can put on the apple store??
    – BlueShark
    Jan 6, 2015 at 12:38
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You don't need to own a Mac nor do you need to learn Objective-C. You can develop in different environments and compile into Objective-C later on.

developing for the iphone and ipad by runing osx 10.6(snow leopard)

This article one of our developers wrote gives a pretty comprehensive walk through on installing OS X Snow Leopard on Windows using iBoot, then installing Vmware (with instructions), then getting your iPhone dev environment going... and a few extra juicy things. Super helpful for me.

Hope that helps. It uses Phonegap so you can develop on multiple smart phone platforms at once.

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You can use Tersus (free, open source).

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    Nope. For native app you still need a Mac to compile and deploy.
    – tensaix2j
    Feb 17, 2014 at 3:33
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A devkit that allows one to develop iPhone apps in Objective-C, C++ or just plain C with Visual Studio:

Check it out at iOS build env

You can build iPhone apps directly within Visual Studio (2008, 2010, Express).

Pretty neat, it even builds IPA files for your app after a successful compilation. The code works as is on jailbroken devices, for the rest of the planet I believe the final compilation & submission to the App Store has to be done on a Mac. But still, it enables you to develop using a well-known IDE.

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Of course, you can write Objective-C code in notepad or other programs and then move it to a Mac to compile.

But seriously, it depends on whether you are developing official applications to put in App Store or developing applications for jailbroken iPhone. To write official applications, Apple iPhone SDK which requires an Intel Mac seems to be the only practical way. However, there is an unofficial toolchain to write applications for jailbroken iPhones. You can run it on Linux and Windows (using Cygwin).

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Try macincloud.com It allows you to rent a mac and access it through RDP remote control. You can then use your PC to access a mac and then develop your apps.

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You will soon be able to use Adobe Flash CS 5 to create Apps for the iPhone on Windows:

flashcs 5

flashcs5 apps for iphone

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Hooray! You can now more easily accomplish this with the latest Xamarin.iOS, using a network-linked mac providing the build and deployment capabilities.

See here for more details:

introduction to xamarin ios for visual studio

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  • Xamarin is a painful stuff. Performance of the app developed on Xamarin (.form / .iOS / .Android) is poor. If you intent to go for cross-plateform then react-native is the best avalyaibe option at moment (in ~2023).
    – Rizwan
    Jan 31, 2023 at 12:57
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If you want it to be legitimate, you have two options, cloud based Mac solutions or cross-platform development tools. You may consider the hackintosh approach or virtual machines if you don't care about legal stuff. If you have a decent PC, running a virtual machine would be the easiest way to go. You may never know which hardware will have driver issues on a hackintosh.

I've tried all these approaches and they all have pros and cons, but for the second group, I feel kind of guilty. I develop apps to make a living and I wouldn't want to rip off someone else for it.

If you are making a small project, cloud based Macs may prove useful. Rent it for a short time, develop your project and off you go. Don't bother learning anything new.

However, if your project is getting big, cross-platform frameworks seem to be the only alternative. The critical thing is that you need to choose wisely. There are so many hybrid frameworks, but what they do can be summarized in one sentence as "diplaying web pages in an app wrapper" and developers' negative experience with hybrid frameworks also affects native frameworks.

I tried three of these (Titanium, Smartface and Xamarin) and they all claim to produce "real native output" and in my opinion their claims are correct. You need to test and see it yoursrlf, it's not easy to describe the native feeling. In a previous comment, it was indicated that it takes some effort to learn these platforms, but once you get to know them, you can develop not just iOS applications but Android applications as well, all with the common code base. And of course, they are much cheaper than a cloud Mac. Some of them are even free. You would need a Mac only for store submission.

If you know JavaScript, try Titanium and Smartface and if you know C#, try Xamarin. Just note that for the device simuator, Titanium is dependent on a Mac, but Smartface has a simulator app for Windows development and it works better than I expected. On the other hand, Xamarin requires a Mac in your network.

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If you want to create iPhone apps but no Mac, then you should try http://www.pmbaty.com/iosbuildenv/

It allows you to easily develop native iOS apps, like with XCode, deployable on any iPhone, iPod or iPad (jailbroken or not).

Use your favourite IDE to code in Objective-C, C++, C or ARM assembly, like in XCode. ARC and blocks are supported.

Compile your iPhone apps directly inside Visual Studio

It works on Windows all versions (XP, 7, 8), FreeBSD and Linux

Now with iOS8 support.

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  • 3
    As per SO policy, can you disclose your affiliation with your recommended site?
    – Allison
    Jul 12, 2015 at 3:21
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Check out this:

Over view

It is a project that attempts to be able to cross-compile programs written in a variety of source languages to a variety of target languages. One of the initial test cases was to write programs in Java and run them on an iPhone. Watching the video on the site is worthwhile.

With that said, I haven't tried it. The project seems quite beta, and there isn't a lot of activity on their SourceForge site.

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  • This project appears to be dead. The project web site describes it as being "currently in an early development phase", and there have been no commits to their source code repository since 2014.
    – user149341
    Feb 4, 2019 at 6:00
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You can use Intel XDK with that you can develop and publish app for iOS without mac.

Click here for detail.

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  • do you need to know objective C language to use Intel XDK? Oct 11, 2016 at 17:45
  • XDK was discontinued in 2017, and is no longer usable.
    – user149341
    Feb 3, 2019 at 21:37
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Interesting that no one has mentioned the cross-platform wxWidgets option.

It's less than an optimal solution, though.

IMHO, the business-wisest way to go is to invest the money in Apple's endorsed framework. That way, if you find yourself stuck with some mind-boggling problem, you have a much larger community of developers to consult with.

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YOU CAN DEVELOP IPHONE APPS ON WINDOWS PC. I've done it, with complex apps. And it works perfectly. You can develop iphone apps without ever seeing a mac or iphone.

You can develop on windows an HTML (or better: HTML5) app, using tools like Sencha or JQTouch, or mobi1. (They used to all be free for a while)

Then you use openSSL to sign the app. And Adobe PhoneGAP Build service to build IPhone App.

But you need the iphone developer licence to install it on an iphone. But you don't need a mac or iphone at any minute to compile, build or test it - all that is done ON THE PC.

I've done it, and it works perfectly. (But with Android type responsiveness - not as fast as a native IPhone app)

You could also use a program from the the Babylonian era (circa 300 bc) running C and C++ called dragonfly. If your app has one or two screens with limited interactivity, and many calculations, go for it. It includes an emulator. You compile to the iphone at the press of a button. (Not sure, but I think you do need a developers license in any case)

And then there is Xamarin. You develop in C# with special calls to native code. You'll have to learn the environment.

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  • Well, you can develop app with PC but building a packet for Apple store needs either access to a Mac or some service out of your PC, that makes that part. At least I did not get any packages to Release folder although project was set to be Release build.
    – mico
    Feb 2, 2015 at 7:26
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Oracle VirtualBox allows users to install Mac OS X in a virtual machine. If you are comfortable with it, you could just use that way to use Xcode. This is legal if you "dual boot" your mac into windows, then install the VirtualBox within windows (or linux).

Other possibilities are cross-compilers such as Appcelerator Titanium (HTML, CSS and JavaScript) or MonoTouch (.NET).

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  • 1
    Using a virtual machine is illegal or isn't it? Mar 21, 2012 at 20:43
  • 1
    illegal ways are not appreciated Feb 10, 2014 at 12:45
  • 2
    Definitely legal, when you've got Windows running as the only system on your Mac.
    – fb55
    Mar 5, 2014 at 16:17
  • I had a virtual machine with MacOS but I can't deploy my app on a real device
    – EriK
    Sep 23, 2019 at 16:43
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You can use Sentenza for make applications for iPhone, on Windows. Tested with success. It's not a solution but a good alternative !

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  • Sentenza for iOS no longer appears to exist. All I can find is sentenzadesktop.com -- which is for desktop, not iOS, and hasn't been updated since 2014.
    – user149341
    Feb 3, 2019 at 21:40
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Two other options

  1. Titanium Developer - free community edition - write in HTML/JavaScript - compile with Xcode (requires a Mac or VM)

  2. OpenPlus ELIPS Studio - write in Flex, compile on Xcode (requires a Mac or VM) - they just started charging for their product however.

I think there may be 'toolchain' options for these and some of the others mentioned, which allow you to compile to binary on Windows, and I have seen that you can upload a zip file and have a toolchain style compile done for you online, but this goes against the Apple licensing.

If I am not mistaken, a product such as Titanium that outputs/works with Xcode and does not use any 3rd party / alternative / restricted libraries should be in compliance, because you are ultimately compiling in xcode - normal Objective-C code and libraries.

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As has been pointed you can attempt to use the WinChain but if you are a newbie coder it won't be easy.

The iPhone SDK will work on Hackintoshes (a normal PC with OS X installed on it). I know as I have one and it does.

So after you go buy an OSX license you could TRY to install it on your PC on a different drive using Boot-132 or one of the other installers like iDeneb. The issue you will have to do a lot of tinkering and things still won't work quite right.

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Using Xamarin now we can develop iPhone applications in Windows machine itself with the help of Xamarin Live Player.

Using this Xamarin live player dev/deploy/debug cycle can now be done without an Apple system.

But to sign and release the app Apple system is required.

Find the reference here

I checked the reference nothing dodgy

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Yes and you don't need to learn Objective-C and buying Apple software and hardware.

Adobe have created compilator from ActionScript 3 to program for iOS. And later Apple approved this method of application creation.

This is best way to create Apple applications under Windows or Linux/BSD (and another one for MacOS-X)

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If you want to develop an application on Windows environment then there is an option, you can install MAC OS in your windows Platform name is : "Niresh'MAC OS" , you can search that text on Google

then you can download the whole MAC OS Source and easily installed MAC OS in your Windows PC, Niresh is able to Hack the whole OS.

Hope this will help you.

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You can install OSX on PC but experience wont be great and it needs lot of work. Alternate is to use a framework/SDK Codename one: which is based on JAVA and can be used to code in WP8, Android, iOS on Windows (eclipse) with all extensive features

Features Overview:

  1. Full Android environment with super fast android simulator
  2. An iPhone/iPad simulator with easy to take iPhone apps to large screen iPad in minutes.
  3. Full support for standard java debugging, profiling for apps on any platform.
  4. Easy themeing / styling – Only a click away

More at Develop Android, iOS iPhone, WP8 apps using Java Disclaimer: This is my review for the product

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Develop iOS Apps on Windows With Cross-Platform Tools

Cross-platform tools are awesome: you code your app once, and export it to iOS and Android. That could potentially cut your app development time and cost in half. Several cross-platform tools allow you to develop iOS apps on a Windows PC, or allow you to compile the app if there’s a Mac in your local network.

Well, not so fast…

The cross-platform tool ecosystem is very large. On the one side you have complete Integrated Development Environments (IDEs) like Xamarin, that allow you to build cross-platform apps with C#.

The middle ground is covered by tools like PhoneGap, Cordova, Ionic and Appcelerator, that let you build native apps with HTML5 components. The far end includes smaller platforms like React Native that allow you to write native apps with a JavaScript wrapper.

The one thing that stands out for all cross-platform tools is this: they’re not beginner friendly! It’s much easier to get access to a Mac, learn Swift, and build a simple app, than it is to get started with Xamarin.

Most of the cross-platform tools require you to have a basic understanding of programming, compilation options, and the iOS and Android ecosystems. That’s something you don’t really have as a beginner developer!

Having said that, let’s look at a couple of options:

If you’re familiar with Windows-based development tools and IDEs, and if you already know how to code, it’s worthwhile to check out Xamarin. With Xamarin you code apps in C#, for multiple platforms, using the Mono and MonoTouch frameworks. If you’re familiar with web-based development, check out PhoneGap or Ionic. You’ll feel right at home with HTML 5, CSS and JavaScript. Don’t forget: a native app works different than a website… If you’re familiar with JavaScript, or if you’d rather learn to code JavaScript than Swift, check out React Native. With React Native you can code native apps for iOS and Android using a “wrapper”. Always deliberately choose for cross-platform tools because it’s a smart option, not because you think a native platform language is bad. The fact that one option isn’t right, doesn’t immediately make another option smarter!

If you don’t want to join the proprietary closed Apple universe, don’t forget that many cross-platform tools are operated by equally evil companies like Google, Facebook, Microsoft, Adobe and Amazon.

An often heard argument against cross-platform tools is that they offer limited access to and support for smartphone hardware, and are less “snappy” than their native counterparts. Keep in mind that any cross-platform tool will require you to write platform-specific code at one point, especially if you want to code custom features.

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If you have ssh access to a Mac, then you can use a VNC (like Vine VNC, which allows multiple uses at once - thin thin client) to control XCode.

This could be useful if you wanted to access a Mac Mini from a laptop, or your S.O. is hogging your MacBook.

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You may try to develop web apps for iPhone using HTML, JavaScript, CSS. Check the getting started info at Apple's site.

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  • I've just found a piece of software called MobiOne Studio. As stated on the site: "MobiOne Studio - the iPhone app and web app designer and iPhone test center with iPhone emulator that enables you to create, customize and run iPhone user interfaces in minutes, not days." Maybe it will be helpful for you. Link: genuitec.com/mobile. Jun 16, 2010 at 19:22

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