Objective-C
Guā-māu
Gí-giân ka-cho̍k | C |
---|---|
Nńg-thé siat-kè | Tom Love and Brad Cox |
Siú-chhù hoat-hêng | 1984 nî |
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] | |
|
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.
Siong-koan
![]() | Pún bûn-chiuⁿ sī chi̍t phiⁿ phí-á-kiáⁿ. Lí thang tàu khok-chhiong lâi pang-chō͘ Wikipedia. |
- ↑ "Runtime Versions and Platforms". Developer.apple.com. goân-loē-iông tī July 20, 2016 hőng khó͘-pih. December 24, 2017 khòaⁿ--ê. Unknown parameter
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The Swift language is the product of tireless effort from a team of language experts, documentation gurus, compiler optimization ninjas, and an incredibly important internal dogfooding group who provided feedback to help refine and battle-test ideas. Of course, it also greatly benefited from the experiences hard-won by many other languages in the field, drawing ideas from Objective-C, Rust, Haskell, Ruby, Python, C#, CLU, and far too many others to list.
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