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Awesome! If you need someone to review/edit chapters I'd love to help. If
not, just go ahead and preorder me a copy :)
Who is the booked aimed at?
The goal is to provide developers with instructions on how to produce
applications on each platform that are the best they can possibly be -
using the most powerful and latest technologies on each platform.
I will be able to comment more specifically about the exact content of the
book as I get closer to the completion of the manuscript. Until then,
unfortunately, I have to refrain from divulging certain details of the
Table of Contents.
Sounds great, I could really use a book to get me up to speed with both
.NET and Cocoa!
Wow, that sounds awesome; I'll definately be buying a copy. However, I
can't help but wonder why you wouldn't just go hard and write the ultimate
leopard programing book - you've obviously enjoyed using cocoa, and there
are already enough .net books out there... I mean, I don't think I've seen
a cocoa book that even includes any reference to Core Data, or other Tiger
technologies ... a good overview of leopard programming would be really
sweet, and you'd have no competition :)
Actually, I think there would be overlap. A general-purpose Leopard book is
probably something that would be more up the alley of Aaron Hillegass. His
current Cocoa book is considered a bible and I would be shocked to find out
that he didn't have plans to update it for Leopard.
Great news. I seem to be fairly good at finding typos as I'm not a speed
reader and would be glad to help proof the book or any part of it for you.
I would like a have a book that is not afraid to be technical and expect
something of its readers. I want a book that experienced programmers can
use to learn those two environments at a deep enough level to be truely
useful.
I don't get it. Are you thinking about using .NET tools/languages to
program against the Cocoa API, similar to Cocoa#? Or is this essentially a
book about 2 different dev environs rolled into one?
It is a book about practical application development, where the code
samples are _both_ in C# and Objective-C on Windows Vista _and_ Mac OS X.