I’ve been looking at DraftCode, which I think is better than the Kodiak since it seems to run its own HTTP server. Now, if only PHP didn’t look like it was cobbled together from the leavings of other languages but drug-crazed monkeys. PHP needs to do a serious cleanup, even bigger than the Python 2->3 one.
@bee Lisping looks really cool, the way its designed to edit, but I have never been into Lisp and company. But, oh, that editor…
Haskell has arrived to ipad, the author of Lisping ( which is a fantastic app) has a new app called Raskell, it claims to implement most of Haskell 98, just bought it looks very clean and has an interesting vim like keyboard/editor
I have both Jasic and Node and what i can say is that Jasic is really well made with some good documentation.
What i can say about Node - JavaScript Interpreter in my limited knowledge is that is expectantly limited to a degree but is still made well
I got jasic a while ago but have yet to have created anything substantial. It’s looking ok so far and even exports to xcode like codea but, given the choice, I would choose Codea every time. It’s so much more user-friendly and fun to code with. Especially for games. The only thing jasic has over it is the cocoa controls library which is quite useful for non-gaming apps.
Thanks @cabernet. Dringend looks interesting and promising. But since it has not yet officially released on the app store, I don’t want to update the list now. There’s also a concern that this app will be rejected by Apple. So, let’s wait and see what about to happen. I’ll update the list once it goes on the app store.
Lets see if it makes it. There is a project on here where you can build your Codea project in xcode and auto upload to testflight but I don’t think you can edit the obj-c
@Briarfox & @Jmv38 - Are you referring to the thread on here regarding using Jenkins on the Mac to do all the heavy lifting? I didn’t bookmark it at the time if it is… :-/
Re: Dringend - I agree with @Bee - looks like there are lots of things that could contravene Apple Submission guidelines IMHO. Surely, you’d still need an Apple Developer Account to deploy to the device as it looks like your testing a compiled app? Unless, they’ve got around it in some cunning way. I suspect Apple doesn’t really like cunning workarounds though. :-/
The developer has tweeted that Dringend was approved by Apple this morning, but iOS 7.1 broke something to do with IPA files. Update being sent to Apple for approval again before release.