Objective-C

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Objective-C sī chi̍t khoán to-iōng-tô͘ ê bu̍t-kiāⁿ kheng-hiòng thêng-sek gí-giân, chiong Smalltalk ê sìn-sek thoân-sàng hêng-sek ka chiūⁿ tī C gí-giân. I sī Apple khai-hoat beh ēng tī OS X kap iOS khoân-kéng ê gí-giân.

Quick Facts Gí-giân ka-cho̍k, Nńg-thé siat-kè ...
Objective-C
Gí-giân ka-cho̍k C
Nńg-thé siat-kè Tom Love and Brad Cox
Siú-chhù hoat-hêng 1984 ; 41  í-chêng (1984)
Ún-tēng
pán-pún
2.0[1]
Lūi-hêng hē-thóng Static, dynamic, weak
OS Cross-platform
Bûn-kiāⁿ khok-tián-miâ .h, .m, .mm, .M
Bāng-chām developer.apple.com
Chú-iàu gí-giân si̍t-chò
Clang, GCC
Khé-hoat gí-giân
C, Smalltalk
Éng-hióng gí-giân
Groovy, Java, Nu, Objective-J, TOM, Swift[2]
Close

Tsù-kái

Siong-koan

Guā-pōo liân-kiat

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.