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What would be the best way to write Objective-C on the Windows platform?

Cygwin and gcc? Is there a way I can somehow integrate this into Visual Studio?

Along those lines - are there any suggestions as to how to link in and use the Windows SDK for something like this. Its a different beast but I know I can write assembly and link in the Windows DLLs giving me accessibility to those calls but I don't know how to do this without googling and getting piecemeal directions.

Is anyone aware of a good online or book resource to do or explain these kinds of things?

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14 Answers 14

148

Expanding on the two previous answers, if you just want Objective-C but not any of the Cocoa frameworks, then gcc will work on any platform. You can use it through Cygwin or get MinGW. However, if you want the Cocoa frameworks, or at least a reasonable subset of them, then GNUStep and Cocotron are your best bets.

Cocotron implements a lot of stuff that GNUStep does not, such as CoreGraphics and CoreData, though I can't vouch for how complete their implementation is on a specific framework. Their aim is to keep Cocotron up to date with the latest version of OS X so that any viable OS X program can run on Windows. Because GNUStep typically uses the latest version of gcc, they also add in support for Objective-C++ and a lot of the Objective-C 2.0 features.

I haven't tested those features with GNUStep, but if you use a sufficiently new version of gcc, you might be able to use them. I was not able to use Objective-C++ with GNUStep a few years ago. However, GNUStep does compile from just about any platform. Cocotron is a very mac-centric project. Although it is probably possible to compile it on other platforms, it comes XCode project files, not makefiles, so you can only compile its frameworks out of the box on OS X. It also comes with instructions on compiling Windows apps on XCode, but not any other platform. Basically, it's probably possible to set up a Windows development environment for Cocotron, but it's not as easy as setting one up for GNUStep, and you'll be on your own, so GNUStep is definitely the way to go if you're developing on Windows as opposed to just for Windows.

For what it's worth, Cocotron is licensed under the MIT license, and GNUStep is licensed under the LGPL.

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  • 1
    You could always port the Cocoa framworks that are open source. Example being CoreFoundation.
    – Cole Tobin
    Nov 25, 2012 at 22:39
  • Not all of Core Foundation IS open source. A huge amount is closed source.
    – uchuugaka
    Dec 28, 2013 at 8:37
  • X'D I dunno why this guy got a best answer he didn't even try the stuff he's talking about. They should make a new badge for bs answers. No offense @michael. It's an interesting read. May 13, 2015 at 15:15
  • No offense taken, but for the record, at the time I wrote this answer, I had been struggling for a few weeks to compile Objective-C for Windows, and had tried going both GNUStep and Cocoatron. I eventually was forced to rewrite the project in C++, due to some compiler bugs at the time, and ivars not initialized to 0 on Windows. I did make reference to "I haven't tested those features", but I was talking about the then-new Objective-C 2.0 features, which had only been available on Apple platforms for less than a year when this answer was written, and had just landed in GNUStep. May 13, 2015 at 19:16
  • This project provides a complete GNUstep setup for Windows using MSVC (not MinGW): github.com/gnustep/tools-windows-msvc
    – Frederik
    Jan 26, 2022 at 8:00
91

You can use Objective C inside the Windows environment. If you follow these steps, it should be working just fine:

  1. Visit the GNUstep website and download GNUstep MSYS Subsystem (MSYS for GNUstep), GNUstep Core (Libraries for GNUstep), and GNUstep Devel
  2. After downloading these files, install in that order, or you will have problems with configuration
  3. Navigate to C:\GNUstep\GNUstep\System\Library\Headers\Foundation1 and ensure that Foundation.h exists
  4. Open up a command prompt and run gcc -v to check that GNUstep MSYS is correctly installed (if you get a file not found error, ensure that the bin folder of GNUstep MSYS is in your PATH)
  5. Use this simple "Hello World" program to test GNUstep's functionality:

    #include <Foundation/Foundation.h>
    
    int main(void)
    {
        NSAutoreleasePool * pool = [[NSAutoreleasePool alloc] init];
        NSLog(@"Hello World!.");
        [pool drain];
     return;
    }
    
  6. Go back to the command prompt and cd to where you saved the "Hello World" program and then compile it:2

    gcc -o helloworld.exe <HELLOWORLD>.m -I /GNUstep/GNUstep/System/Library/Headers -L /GNUstep/GNUstep/System/Library/Libraries -std=c99 -lobjc -lgnustep-base -fconstant-string-class=NSConstantString
    
  7. Finally, from the command prompt, type helloworld to run it

All the best, and have fun with Objective-C!


NOTES:

  1. I used the default install path - adjust your command line accordingly
  2. Ensure the folder path of yours is similar to mine, otherwise you will get an error
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  • 1
    This suggested installation didnt work on my PC because i have already installed gcc which i used for nasm. So i just corrected gcc -o helloworld... to c:\gnustep\bin\gcc -o helloworld... and it worked. The alternative would be to modify Environment Variables which i didnt do since i was just sight seeing Objective C. Thanks to teshguru for up to the point answer. Sep 3, 2012 at 21:04
  • Consider removing code formatting around the names of things. GNUstep MYSY isn't code, it's just the name of a software. If you want something to stand out, maybe consider emboldening it? And if something connects to a tag, consider using the tag delimiters, but there shouldn't be any reason to put proper names in tag delims. May 13, 2015 at 0:13
  • when used yhis c:\gnustep\bin\gcc -o helloworld.exe helloworld.m -I /GNUstep/GNUstep/System/Library/Headers -L /GNUstep/GNUstep/System/Library/Libraries -std=c99 -lobjc -lgnustep-base -fconstant-string-class=NSConstantString it works fir me
    – Rahul
    Aug 20, 2015 at 18:04
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WinObjC? Windows Bridge for iOS (previously known as ‘Project Islandwood’).

Windows Bridge for iOS (also referred to as WinObjC) is a Microsoft open source project that provides an Objective-C development environment for Visual Studio/Windows. In addition, WinObjC provides support for iOS API compatibility. While the final release will happen later this fall (allowing the bridge to take advantage of new tooling capabilities that will ship with the upcoming Visual Studio 2015 Update),

The bridge is available to the open-source community now in its current state. Between now and the fall. The iOS bridge as an open-source project under the MIT license. Given the ambition of the project, making it easy for iOS developers to build and run apps on Windows.

Salmaan Ahmed has an in-depth post on the Windows Bridge for iOS http://blogs.windows.com/buildingapps/2015/08/06/windows-bridge-for-ios-lets-open-this-up/ discussing the compiler, runtime, IDE integration, and what the bridge is and isn’t. Best of all, the source code for the iOS bridge is live on GitHub right now.

The iOS bridge supports both Windows 8.1 and Windows 10 apps built for x86 and x64 processor architectures, and soon we will add compiler optimizations and support for ARM, which adds mobile support.

1
  • Unfortunately the Windows Bridge for iOS (WinObjC) is no longer being maintained by Microsoft.
    – Frederik
    Feb 21, 2022 at 14:51
13

Also:

The Cocotron is an open source project which aims to implement a cross-platform Objective-C API similar to that described by Apple Inc.'s Cocoa documentation. This includes the AppKit, Foundation, Objective-C runtime and support APIs such as CoreGraphics and CoreFoundation.

http://www.cocotron.org/

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    The Cocotron project is designed to be cross-compiled from XCode, not written on Windows and compiled there.
    – Dan Udey
    Sep 26, 2008 at 18:58
  • 2
    this isn't a good answer, i'm not even sure why the OP picked this as 'the answer' because CoCotron is for Mac and the OP wants a Windows based solution.
    – cbrulak
    Apr 3, 2009 at 18:28
  • You are correct - I got a little too excited when I read this: "The general goal is to provide complete support on any viable platform, the project is intended to be as portable as possible. However, most of the work at this time is focused on providing support for Microsoft Windows. In particular the NT based versions, 2000 up to Vista." Jun 19, 2009 at 22:53
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I have mixed feelings about the Cocotron project. I'm glad they are releasing source code and sharing but I don't feel that they are doing things the easiest way.

Examples.
Apple has released the source code to the objective-c runtime, which includes properties and garbage collection. The Cocotron project however has their own implementation of the objective-c runtime. Why bother to duplicate the effort? There is even a Visual Studio Project file that can be used to build an objc.dll file. Or if you're really lazy, you can just copy the DLL file from an installation of Safari on Windows.

They also did not bother to leverage CoreFoundation, which is also open sourced by Apple. I posted a question about this but did not receive an answer.

I think the current best solution is to take source code from multiple sources (Apple, CocoTron, GnuStep) and merge it together to what you need. You'll have to read a lot of source but it will be worth the end result.

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    Sorry about not answering your question on the group, to summarize: The APSL sucks and both the runtime and CF are under them. Nov 11, 2009 at 16:33
  • 1
    What sucks about the APSL? (opensource.apple.com/license/apsl) It's not invasive like the GPL. If you modify covered code then you must make that code available. Covered code would be any modifications that you make to CoreFoundation for example, but would not include you actual program. You also need to clearly mark your modifications. This is a nuisance but worth the trade-off of using Apple's highly tested code isn't it? Nov 12, 2009 at 13:03
  • 8
    I don't think you understand how the termination works, it is not something they can do to everyone all at once, the code is licensed under the terms and usable under those terms indefinitely. What can happen is that Apple can single out individuals/companies who they think have violated the license. The FSF already does this with GPL violations, you really think Apple is more friendly to developers than the FSF? If you think the terms are inconsequential and meaningless I'm sure you can convince Apple legal to just take them out. Dec 2, 2009 at 18:39
  • 8
    It should be noted that Apple worked with the FSF on changes to the APSL and that the FSF considers the APSL Version 2.0 to be a free software license. gnu.org/philosophy/apsl.html
    – Sean
    Apr 18, 2011 at 13:36
  • 3
    From my perspective (as someone who has dealt with BSD, LGPL, MIT and other licenses in a proprietary product) Apple's license is LESS restrictive than the GPL - which frankly is a pain in the butt. If I can get BSD, MIT, or APSL, I would rather work with those than GPL. Nov 15, 2012 at 15:20
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I'm aware this is a very old post, but I have found a solution which has only become available more recently AND enables nearly all Objective-C 2.0 features on the Windows platform.

With the advent of gcc 4.6, support for Objective-C 2.0 language features (blocks, dot syntax, synthesised properties, etc) was added to the Objective-C compiler (see the release notes for full details). Their runtime has also been updated to work almost identically to Apple's own Objective-C 2.0 runtime. In short this means that (almost) any program that will legitimately compile with Clang on a Mac will also compile with gcc 4.6 without modification.

As a side-note, one feature that is not available is dictionary/array/etc literals as they are all hard-coded into Clang to use Apple's NSDictionary, NSArray, NSNumber, etc classes.

However, if you are happy to live without Apple's extensive frameworks, you can. As noted in other answers, GNUStep and the Cocotron provide modified versions of Apple's class libraries, or you can write your own (my preferred option).

MinGW is one way to get GCC 4.6 on the Windows platform, and can be downloaded from The MinGW website. Make sure when you install it you include the installation of C, C++, Objective-C and Objective-C++. While optional, I would also suggest installing the MSYS environment.

Once installed, Objective-C 2.0 source can be compiled with:

gcc MyFile.m -lobjc -std=c99 -fobjc-exceptions -fconstant-string-class=clsname (etc, additional flags, see documentation)

MinGW also includes support for compiling native GUI Windows applications with the -mwindows flag. For example:

g++ -mwindows MyFile.cpp

I have not attempted it yet, but I imagine if you wrap your Objective-C classes in Objective-C++ at the highest possible layer, you should be able to successfully intertwine native Windows GUI C++ and Objective-C all in the one Windows Application.

7

Check out WinObjC:

https://github.com/Microsoft/WinObjC

It's an official, open-source project by Microsoft that integrates with Visual Studio + Windows.

1
  • WinObjC is no longer being maintained by Microsoft.
    – Frederik
    Feb 21, 2022 at 14:52
6

If you just want to experiment, there's an Objective-C compiler for .NET (Windows) here: qckapp

1
  • this program could not compile with osc.#import <Foundation/Foundation.h> int main (int argc, const char *argv[]) { NSAutoreleasePool * pool = [[NSAutoreleasePool alloc] init]; NSLog (@”Testing...\n..1\n...2\n....3”); [pool drain]; return 0; }
    – KIRAN K J
    Jun 29, 2011 at 8:33
5

You can get an objective c compiler that will work with Windows and play nice with Visual Studio 2008\2010 here.

open-c flite

Just download the latest source. You don't need to build all of CF-Lite there is a solution called objc.sln. You will need to fix a few of the include paths but then it will build just fine. There is even a test project included so you can see some objective-c .m files being compiled and working in visual studio. One sad thing is it only works with Win32 not x64. There is some assembly code that would need to be written for x64 for it to support that.

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  • I downloaded and run this project using Visual Studio 2013 and I got 30 instances of this error. Error 64 error C2632: 'char' followed by 'bool' is illegal C:\opencflite-code-248-trunk\include\c99\stdbool.h 20 1 objc Sep 14, 2014 at 4:19
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A recent attempt to port Objective C 2.0 to Windows is the Subjective project.

From the Readme:

Subjective is an attempt to bring Objective C 2.0 with ARC support to Windows.

This project is a fork of objc4-532.2, the Objective C runtime that ships with OS X 10.8.5. The port can be cross-compiled on OS X using llvm-clang combined with the MinGW linker.

There are certain limitations many of which are a matter of extra work, while others, such as exceptions and blocks, depend on more serious work in 3rd party projects. The limitations are:

• 32-bit only - 64-bit is underway

• Static linking only - dynamic linking is underway

• No closures/blocks - until libdispatch supports them on Windows

• No exceptions - until clang supports them on Windows

• No old style GC - until someone cares...

• Internals: no vtables, no gdb support, just plain malloc, no preoptimizations - some of these things will be available under the 64-bit build.

• Currently a patched clang compiler is required; the patch adds -fobjc-runtime=subj flag

The project is available on Github, and there is also a thread on the Cocotron Group outlining some of the progress and issues encountered.

1
  • This project seems to be defunct, as the submodule pointers for gnustep-base and libobjc2 no longer work.
    – Frederik
    Feb 21, 2022 at 14:55
2

Get GNUStep here

Get MINGW here

Install MINGW Install GNUStep Then Test

1

As of 2021, the GNUstep Windows MSVC Toolchain allows to integrate Objective-C code in any Windows app, including Visual Studio projects using LLVM/Clang. This includes support for Automatic Reference Counting (ARC) and Objective-C 2.0 features such as blocks.

The project includes the Foundation, CoreFoundation, and libdispatch libraries from GNUstep. It does currently not include any UI framework such as AppKit or UIKit, but it can be used to e.g. write a Windows-specific UI with cross-platform business logic written in Objective-C.

0

If you are comfortable with Visual Studio environment,

Small project: jGRASP with gcc Large project: Cocotron

I heard there are emulators, but I could find only Apple II Emulator http://virtualapple.org/. It looks like limited to games.

0

First of all, forget about GNUStep tools. Neither ProjectManager nor ProjectCenter can be called an IDE. With all due respect, it looks like guys from GNUStep project are stuck in the late 80-s (which is when NeXTSTEP first appeared).

Vim

ctags support Objective-C since r771 (be sure to pick the pre-release 5.9 version and add --langmap=ObjectiveC:.m.h to the command line, see here), so you'll have decent code completion/tag navigation.

Here's a short howto on adding Objective-C support to Vim tagbar plugin.

Emacs

The same applies to etags shipped with modern Emacsen, so you can start with Emacs Objective C Mode. YASnippet will provide useful templates:

YASnippet objc-mode

and if you want something more intelligent than the basic tags-based code completion, take a look at this question.

Eclipse

CDT supports Makefile-based projects:

enter image description here

-- so technically you can build your Objective-C projects out of the box (on Windows, you'll need the Cygwin or MinGW toolchain). The only problem is the code editor which will report plenty of errors against what it thinks is a pure C code (on-the-fly code checking can be turned off, but still...). If you want proper syntax highlighting, you can add Eclim to your Eclipse and enjoy all the good features of both Eclipse and Vim (see above).

Another promising Eclipse plugin is Colorer, but it doesn't support Objective-C as of yet. Feel free to file a feature request though.

SlickEdit

SlickEdit, among other features of a great IDE, does support Objective-C. While it is fairly complex to learn (not as complex as Emacs though), I believe this is your best option provided you don't mind purchasing it (the price is quite affordable).

Additionally, it has an Eclipse plugin which can be used as an alternative to the stand-alone editor.

KDevelop

Rumor has it there exists a KDevelop patch (15 year old, but who cares?). I personally don't think KDevelop is feature-superior compared to Emacsen, so I wouldn't bother trying it.


The above also applies to Objective-C development on Linux, since all of the tools mentioned are more or less portable.

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