The way I'm currently doing it is with two separate apps as well. I keep the Xcode GDB window open for building and debug output and I have MacVim open for editing the code. Of course, I have to open up the main project window if I want to add some files to the project, but I find that having Xcode open anyways is a good idea because I need to consult the documentation quite often (I'm new to Cocoa). -- Michael Jackson http://mjijackson.com @mjijackson On Thu, Jun 17, 2010 at 11:52 AM, dan sinclair <dj2@everburning.com> wrote:
I tried using TextMate with XCode for a while but I didn't like having to switch back and forth between the two all the time. It felt clunky to develop in TextMate and build and see the debug output in XCode. Having to run XCode just to be able to build the application felt heavy. That was part of the reason why I switched to a pure Rakefile method.
dan
On 2010-06-17, at 1:43 PM, Rich Morin wrote:
Xcode has some scripting capability. Might you be able to hack up some scripts to automate away some of the hassle?
-r -- http://www.cfcl.com/rdm Rich Morin http://www.cfcl.com/rdm/resume rdm@cfcl.com http://www.cfcl.com/rdm/weblog +1 650-873-7841
Technical editing and writing, programming, system design _______________________________________________ MacRuby-devel mailing list MacRuby-devel@lists.macosforge.org http://lists.macosforge.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/macruby-devel
_______________________________________________ MacRuby-devel mailing list MacRuby-devel@lists.macosforge.org http://lists.macosforge.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/macruby-devel