With an all-new design that looks great on macOS Big Sur, Xcode 12 has customizable font sizes for the navigator, streamlined code completion, and new document tabs. Xcode 12 builds Universal apps by default to support Mac with Apple Silicon, often without changing a single line of code.
- SketchUp Pro 2019 19.3.255 + crack (FULL),GRAPHISOFT ARCHICAD 23 Build 3003 WIN-MAC cracked (FULL),Chief Architect Interiors X11 21.2.0.48 + crack (FULL),Chief Architect Premier X11 21.2.0.48 + crack (FULL),SketchUp Pro 2019 19.1.173 MAC + crack (FULL),SketchUp Pro 2019 19.1.174 + crack (FULL),ARCHLine XP 2019 RC 190131 Build 147 + crack (FULL),SketchUp Pro 2019 19.0.685 + crack + portable.
- If the Mac is still running 10.2 or maybe 10.3 then you have a fair bit more work to configure sshd to load the X11 authentication cookies, because back then the sshd program included in OSX didn't know about the xauth program included in OSX.
Designed for macOS Big Sur.
Xcode 12 looks great on macOS Big Sur, with a navigator sidebar that goes to the top of the window and clear new toolbar buttons. The navigator defaults to a larger font that’s easier to read, while giving you multiple size choices. New document tabs make it easy to create a working set of files within your workspace.
Document tabs.
From X11 (which runs side by side with Mac OS X’s native Aqua environment), you can run a host of graphical Unix programs—applications that haven’t been fully ported to Mac OS X—as well as.
The new tab model lets you open a new tab with a double-click, or track the selected file as you click around the navigator. You can re-arrange the document tabs to create a working set of files for your current task, and configure how content is shown within each tab. The navigator tracks the open files within your tabs using strong selection.
Prior to the introduction of Mac OS X, virtually the only way developers could create a graphical application in a UNIX-based operating system was with the X Window System, more commonly called X11. X11 for Mac OS X updated. 21 08 09 - Filed in: X11 Mac OS X. X11 2.4.0 Released: 2009.08.14 This release contains Xquartz-1.5.3-apple14. Download X11-2.4.0.dmg,.
Navigator font sizes.
The navigator now tracks the system setting for “Sidebar icon size” used in Finder and Mail. You can also choose a unique font size just for Xcode within Preferences, including the traditional dense information presentation, and up to large fonts and icon targets.
Code completion streamlined.
A new completion UI presents only the information you need, taking up less screen space as you type. And completions are presented much faster, so you can keep coding at maximum speed.
Redesigned organizer.
An all-new design groups all critical information about each of your apps together in one place. Choose any app from any of your teams, then quickly navigate to inspect crash logs, energy reports, and performance metrics, such as battery consumption and launch time of your apps when used by customers.
SwiftUI
SwiftUI offers new features, improved performance, and the power to do even more, all while maintaining a stable API that makes it easy to bring your existing SwiftUI code forward into Xcode 12. A brand new life cycle management API for apps built with SwiftUI lets you write your entire app in SwiftUI and share even more code across all Apple platforms. And a new widget platform built on SwiftUI lets you build widgets that work great on iPad, iPhone, and Mac. Your SwiftUI views can now be shared with other developers, and appear as first-class controls in the Xcode library. And your existing SwiftUI code continues to work, while providing faster performance, better diagnostics, and access to new controls.
Universal app ready.
Xcode 12 is built as a Universal app that runs 100% natively on Intel-based CPUs and Apple Silicon for great performance and a snappy interface.* It also includes a unified macOS SDK that includes all the frameworks, compilers, debuggers, and other tools you need to build apps that run natively on Apple Silicon and the Intel x86_64 CPU.
Updated automatically
When you open your project in Xcode 12, your app is automatically updated to produce release builds and archives as Universal apps. When you build your app, Xcode produces one binary “slice” for Apple Silicon and one for the Intel x86_64 CPU, then wraps them together as a single app bundle to share or submit to the Mac App Store. You can test this at any time by selecting “Any Mac” as the target in the toolbar.
Test multiple architectures.
On the new Mac with Apple Silicon, you can run and debug apps running on either the native architecture or on Intel virtualization by selecting “My Mac (Rosetta)” in the toolbar.
Multiplatform template
New multiplatform app templates set up new projects to easily share code among iOS, iPadOS, and macOS using SwiftUI and the new lifecycle APIs. The project structure encourages sharing code across all platforms, while creating special custom experiences for each platform where it makes sense for your app.
Improved auto-indentation
Swift code is auto-formatted as you type to make common Swift code patterns look much better, including special support for the “guard” command.
StoreKit testing
New tools in Xcode let you create StoreKit files that describe the various subscription and in-app purchase products your app can offer, and create test scenarios to make sure everything works great for your customers — all locally testable on your Mac.
Get started.
Download Xcode 12 and use these resources to build apps for all Apple platforms.
FAQ for OpenOffice.org 1.0 X11 for Mac OS X and Darwin (Final Beta)
Last updated 2003-02-23 by Dan Williams
Sections
- General Questions
- What is OpenOffice.org?
- What are we announcing today?
- Who can / should use this software?
- What can the OpenOffice.org 1.0 X11 for Mac OS X and Darwin (Final Beta) release do today?
- What is OpenOffice.org 1.0 X11 for Mac OS X and Darwin (Final Beta)?
- What does the X11 graphics mean?
- When will OpenOffice.org 1.0 for Mac OS X and Darwin (Final) be officially released?
- How can I help the OpenOffice.org Mac OS X/Darwin porting team?
- What are the limitations of the OpenOffice.org 1.0 X11 for Mac OS X and Darwin (Final Beta)?
- When will an Aqua version be available?
- Will OpenOffice.org 1.0 run on OS 9 and earlier operating systems?
- What support is offered with the OpenOffice.org 1.0 X11 for Mac OS X and Darwin (Final Beta)?
- What are the objectives of OpenOffice.org?
- Why is OpenOffice.org significant?
- What role has Sun Microsystems, Inc., had in the Mac OS X/Darwin port so far?
- What is Apple Computer, Inc.'s involvement with the project?
- What prevents someone from moving from Microsoft Office v.X to OpenOffice.org on Mac OS X?
- What is the difference between Sun's StarOffice 6.0 [tm] and OpenOffice.org 1.0?
- Will there ever be a StarOffice for Mac OS X?
- Where can I get more information about OpenOffice.org?
- Developer Questions
- From a developer's standpoint, what needs to be done with OpenOffice.org on Mac OS X/Darwin?
- What is the state of the build on Mac OS X/Darwin?
- What tools are used to build OpenOffice.org on Mac OS X/Darwin?
- If I want to help or contribute patches, whom should I contact?
- What kind of hardware does a developer need to work on the OS X OpenOffice.org port?
General Questions
Question: What is OpenOffice.org?
Answer: OpenOffice.org 1.0 is a full-featured office productivity suite that provides a near drop-in replacement for Microsoft Office. Users report that little or no training is required for people migrating from other office suites - everything works the way people expect.
The free office productivity software suite features key desktop applications - including word processor, spreadsheet, presentation and drawing programs - in more than 25 languages. In addition, OpenOffice.org 1.0 works transparently with a variety of file formats, enabling users to exchange documents freely with users of other office suites, such as Microsoft Office and StarOffice [tm] 6.0 software. OpenOffice.org 1.0 software is stable and runs natively on multiple platforms, including Linux, PPC Linux, Solaris [tm], Windows and many other flavors of Unix, and will fully support Mac OS X and Darwin upon completion of the port.
OpenOffice.org 1.0 is the culmination of more than 2 years of collaborative effort by members of the OpenOffice.org community, which is comprised of Sun employees, volunteers, CollabNet, and end users, all working to create a world-class international office suite that will run on all major platforms.
Written in C++ and with documented APIs licensed under the LGPL and SISSL Open Source licenses, OpenOffice.org allows any knowledgeable developer to benefit from the source. And, because the file format for OpenOffice.org is XML, interoperability is easy, making future development and adoption more certain.
TopQuestion: What are we announcing today?
Answer: Today, OpenOffice.org and the OpenOffice.org Mac OS X/Darwin porting team announces the release of OpenOffice.org 1.0 X11 for Mac OS X and Darwin (Final Beta).
TopQuestion: Who can / should use this software?
Answer: The release announced today brings OpenOffice.org 1.0 to all users running Apple's Mac OS X v10.2 or higher operating system (v10.1 binaries will be available soon), as well as Apple's open-source Darwin OS. Mac users can now download the OpenOffice.org 1.0 X11 for Mac OS X and Darwin (Final Beta) and begin deploying this free office suite for day-to-day use as near total replacement for Microsoft Office on their Mac OS X-based computers.
OpenOffice.org 1.0 X11 for Mac OS X and Darwin (Final Beta) offers Mac users the same open file formats, unlimited language portability and cross-platform compatibility enjoyed by users across all the other supported platforms, including Linux, Windows, Solaris and FreeBSD. Users can 'OPEN' and 'SAVE AS' MS Office file formats and will enjoy the confidence of permanent file access granted by OpenOffice.org 1.0 X11 for Mac OS X and Darwin (Final Beta)'s use the international standard XML file format specification.
TopQuestion: What can the OpenOffice.org 1.0 X11 for Mac OS X and Darwin (Final Beta) release do today?
Answer: All four main components of the OpenOffice.org suite, Writer, Draw, Calc, and Impress, may be used productively to create, save, load, print, present, and manipulate all common types of documents. OpenOffice.org offers compatibility with Microsoft Office file formats, allowing any Microsoft Office file to be opened and manipulated natively.
Improvements over our previous Beta version include:
- Full international language and keyboard support for editing, display, and printing
- Improvements in font support and font antialiasing
- Improved printing support, including automatic recognition of all 10.2 printers in the Mac OS X Print Center
- Seamless 'Print to PDF' support
- Mozilla address book connectivity
- Audio support (OS X only)
- JDBC support for database accessibility
- Automatic URL handling (clicking a URL fires up appropriate OS X application) (OS X only)
- Improved version of Start OOo program for better Finder and OroborOSX/XDarwin integration
Still, while this release is not final and is intended to solicit public feedback, bug reports, and to attract developers to the project, it is feature-complete for our first X11 (Final) release. The main focus will be on fixing bugs in the Final Beta to allow for a full Final release in Spring 2003.
TopQuestion: What is OpenOffice.org 1.0 X11 for Mac OS X and Darwin (Final Beta)?
Answer: Today's release of the software will be followed closely by the full OpenOffice.org 1.0 X11 for Mac OS X and Darwin (Final) release. In the interim, the Final Beta release is intended for general public consumption to help the OpenOffice.org team fix bugs before the 1.0 X11 (Final) version is released. The X11 Final Beta still requires the XWindows windowing system from the XFree86 project.
Work will be ongoing to create a stable, bug-free port based on OpenOffice.org 1.0.1 (and later 1.1), which will include both the XWindows version and a Mac OS X Quartz/Aqua graphics version, but more developers are needed. Everyone is invited to join the project and lend a hand!TopQuestion: What does the X11 graphics mean?
Answer: The XWindow System, version X11R6, is a set of libraries and programs that implement core components of a Graphical User Interface. As a Unix standard, the XWindow system is consequently able to run on Apple's Mac OS X and its Darwin core, providing the base for OpenOffice.org 1.0 X11 for Mac OS X and Darwin (Final Beta). The XWindow System is hugely popular with Unix and Linux operating systems, and that support was leveraged to create the version of OpenOffice.org for Mac OS X and Darwin released today. While applications that leverage the XWindow System do not have the Aqua look and feel that Mac users are accustomed to, they are just as functional as any other Mac OS program.
Xquartz For Mac
TopQuestion: When will OpenOffice.org 1.0 for Mac OS X and Darwin (Final) be officially released?
Answer: There are really two answers to this question. First, the OpenOffice.org Mac OS X/Darwin porting team is scheduled to release an OpenOffice.org 1.0 X11 for Mac OS X and Darwin (Final) version in Spring 2003. This release will still require software from the XFree86 project to run, specifically the XWindows windowing system, but will be a full, final, production release of the OpenOffice.org 1.0 office suite for Mac OS X and Darwin.
For the full Mac OS X native, Aquafied version of OpenOffice.org with a Mac look & feel, there is no set release date since it depends on the help available. The more developers that join the porting team to work on the OpenOffice.org Mac OS X and Darwin ports, the quicker development will proceed. Even after development is complete there will still need to be testing, bug fixing, internationalization, and other tasks such as authoring of end-user documentation. However, progress is being made and help is needed to reach this goal more quickly.
TopQuestion: How can I help the OpenOffice.org Mac OS X/Darwin porting team?
Answer: Get involved! Join the OpenOffice.org Community and participate in development; all are welcome. Even if you don't have programming experience, your help would be greatly appreciated. There is much to be done on the Mac OS X/Darwin port, including finishing missing implementations, fixing bugs, working on documentation, evangelizing OpenOffice.org, and testing. To join the project and project mailing lists, see http://porting.openoffice.org/mac/ and join the team!
TopQuestion: What are the limitations of the OpenOffice.org 1.0 X11 for Mac OS X and Darwin (Final Beta)?
Answer: This release is not a full Final release, but is feature-complete; all that remains before an X11 Final release is to fix bugs uncovered in the Final Beta. It is also intended to show developers and users the potential of the OpenOffice.org suite and to attract interest in finishing the Mac OS X and Darwin ports. Also, the Aqua interface version is not available at this time as it is currently under heavy development. The Mac OS X/Darwin porting team hopes that interested developers will join up with the team to finish the missing parts of the Mac OS X and Darwin ports.
TopQuestion: When will an Aqua version be available?
Answer: The Quartz/Aqua build represents a substantial amount of work on the OpenOffice.org user interface, and there is much still to be done. The more developers the Mac OS X/Darwin port of OpenOffice.org attracts, the faster progress will be. At this point, there is no estimated time of completion for the Aqua native interface due the amount of work yet to be done and the number of contributing developers. Our timeline for development offers an estimate of project course with the current resources available to us. As always, these delivery dates can be moved up with increased involvement from the community.
TopQuestion: Will OpenOffice.org 1.0 run on OS 9 and earlier operating systems?
Answer: No, it will not. The current Macintosh porting effort for OpenOffice.org is targeting Mac OS X v10.1 and higher. There is no porting team working on support for older operating systems. Because of the technical differences between OS X and older operating systems and how they are used in the porting code, older Mac OS releases are essentially a different operating system for the purposes of the OpenOffice.org source code. Supporting OS 9 and earlier releases would require a second porting team to start from scratch. There are no plans to create an OS 9 porting team at this time.
TopQuestion: What support is offered with the OpenOffice.org 1.0 X11 for Mac OS X and Darwin (Final Beta)?
Answer: This is a Final Beta, and therefore comes with no formal user support. Instead, get involved with OpenOffice.org and help the project out! There are a number of OpenOffice.org mailing lists to which questions, problems, and issues can be posted. These can be found at /project/porting. There is a testing forum (Testing - Mac OS X) at www.ooodocs.org specifically for issues with the Mac OS X/Darwin port. Instructions for building OpenOffice.org are posted at the Mac OS X/Darwin porting section of /project/porting/, and anyone who is interested is encouraged to try the build out and to join the porting project.
TopQuestion: What are the objectives of OpenOffice.org?
Answer: The objectives of OpenOffice.org are to:
- Provide a free open source office suite in many languages and on many platforms;
- Provide open access to the source code;
- Establish open productivity XML-based file formats and language-independent component APIs;
- Enable innovation, which will build the next generation of open network productivity services.
Question: Why is OpenOffice.org significant?
Answer: It is important for many reasons:
- Total cost of ownership is favorable, the office suite is free!;
- Open file formats give continuous file compatibility over time and compatibility with files generated with other suites;
- Multi lingual, Multi platform - every one can standardize on it and it is ideal for anyone in an environment using mixed operating systems;
- Stability and features are strong and getting stronger;
- Ease of use - Training is not an issue, anyone who had used an office suite will find OpenOffice.org intuitive;
- Future modules and developments are positive:
- A future groupware project, working on developing functionality sufficient to make OpenOffice.org a complete replacement for Microsoft office plus MS Exchange server;
- XMerge (plug-in Java based framework for converting documents between formats for hand held devices). Allows you to view, edit and format the original document within your handheld. Not feasible without XML.
Question: What role has Sun Microsystems, Inc., had in the Mac OS X/Darwin port so far?
Answer: Sun has been extremely helpful in support of all the porting projects, including the Mac OS X/Darwin port. In addition to actually releasing the OpenOffice.org source code under license to the community in the first place, Sun engineers have contributed code, assistance, and support to the Mac OS X/Darwin porting team.
Sun continues to sponsor and support the innovation in the OpenOffice.org community and remains a strong supporter for the use of open standards in the industry. It is critical for all of Sun's customers that there be open, viable, cutting-edge office productivity software available to run in the heterogeneous network and across all platforms. OpenOffice.org makes it possible. Through open standards and by expanding the market for product implementations based on open standards Sun can lead through hardware and related services. Sun believes 'innovation happens elsewhere' and the OpenOffice.org community has shown true creativity and innovation both in development and marketing of OpenOffice.org 1.0.
TopQuestion: What is Apple Computer, Inc.'s involvement with the project?
X11 For Mac Os Catalina
Answer: Apple Computer, Inc. is generally very supportive of Open Source development, including projects such as the Mac OS X/Darwin port of OpenOffice.org, but has no formal relationship with OpenOffice.org or the Mac OS X/Darwin porting team.
TopQuestion: What prevents someone from moving from Microsoft Office v.X to OpenOffice.org on Mac OS X?
Answer: The OpenOffice.org Mac OS X/Darwin porting team members have actually been using OpenOffice.org 1.0 for all their office-suite needs since October 2002. With the release of OpenOffice.org 1.0 X11 for Mac OS X and Darwin (Final Beta), the port is almost ready for prime-time, and needs only heavy testing and the resulting bug fixes to be a complete office suite on Mac OS X and Darwin. As always, more developers are needed and welcomed to help the port move along and begin to look and behave like a native Mac OS X application.
X11 For Mac
TopQuestion: What is the difference between Sun's StarOffice 6.0 [tm] and OpenOffice.org 1.0?
Answer: OpenOffice.org 1.0, which shares the same code base as Sun's StarOffice 6.0 [tm] software is - like StarOffice - a full-featured office suite that provides a near drop-in replacement for Microsoft Office. OpenOffice.org 1.0 offers software freedom, enabling a free market for service and support, while the Sun-branded product, StarOffice 6.0 software, offers fee-based support and training, along with deployment and migration services.
StarOffice 6.0 [tm] includes some proprietary code in the form of third-party licensed technology, which is not available in OpenOffice.org 1.0. Examples of this third-party technology include:
- Certain fonts (including, especially, Asian language fonts)
- Dieckmann spell checker (OpenOffice.org has a community developed open source spellchecker)
- The database component (Adabas D)
- Certain file filters
- Extensive clip art gallery
OpenOffice.org 1.0 is available in 27 different languages with new language ports being added continuously. The suite has been ported to other operating system platforms, including Linux (both Intel and PPC), Solaris, Windows, and FreeBSD, with other ports continuously in development.
TopQuestion: Will there ever be a StarOffice for Mac OS X?
Answer: Sun Microsystems has no current plans to bring the StarOffice suite to Mac OS X. However, Sun contributed much of the base and core technologies for the current Mac OS X/Darwin port, and the Mac OS X/Darwin porting team is working hard to finish it. Sun continues to provide support to the OpenOffice.org community, and therefore the Mac OS X/Darwin porting project.
TopQuestion: Where can I get more information about OpenOffice.org?
Answer: The OpenOffice.org website (/) is the best location for up-to-date information on OpenOffice.org. For more information about the Mac OS X/Darwin port, check out http://porting.openoffice.org/mac/.
Developer Questions
Question: From a developer's standpoint, what needs to be done with OpenOffice.org on Mac OS X/Darwin?
Answer: There are a number of modules and functions of OpenOffice.org for Mac OS X/Darwin that either are incomplete in implementation or completely lacking implementation. For example, the Aqua interface implementation is largely incomplete. Other features like Drag & Drop, and full-screen graphics are incomplete for the Quartz/Aqua native version, and only mostly supported in the X11 graphics version. Developers are greatly encouraged to join the porting team at OpenOffice.org and help fill in the missing pieces.
See the roadmap at j/http://porting.openoffice.org/mac/timeline.html for more detailed information on what still needs to be completed.
TopQuestion: What is the state of the build on Mac OS X/Darwin?
Answer: The OOO_STABLE_1_PORTS CVS branch contains code for two versions of the Mac OS X/Darwin port: X11 graphics and Quartz/Aqua graphics. Currently, further patches are also required for Mac OS X/Darwin and Quartz/Aqua functionality and are in the process of commit approval. OpenOffice.org 1.0.1 builds fully and creates an install set for the X11 graphics version. The Quartz/Aqua graphics version does not build completely and many functions are missing. Much more work must be done to bring the Quartz/Aqua version up to par with the X11 version.
TopQuestion: What tools are used to build OpenOffice.org on Mac OS X/Darwin?
Answer: The build process involves heavy use of shell scripts and makefiles, relying on Apple's developer tools, the Mac OS X/Darwin BSD layer, and other open source development software. The compiler currently in use is Apple's version of gcc2, and all debugging must be done from the command line with gdb. Build support for gcc3 is still in progress at this time.
TopQuestion: If I want to help or contribute patches, whom should I contact?
Answer: The best thing to do is to join up with the Porting project of OpenOffice.org (http://porting.openoffice.org) and subscribe to the mailing lists there. The current Mac OS X/Darwin development team reads those lists and responds to questions posted there. For patches over 10 lines of code, the author must have signed the Joint Copyright Agreement (JCA) and filed it with the OpenOffice.org project. Then the changes can be submitted to a Mac OS X/Darwin committer, the general procedure of which is normal for most open source projects.
Xquartz
TopDownload X11 For Mac
Question: What kind of hardware does a developer need to work on the OS X OpenOffice.org port?
Answer: The best you can get your hands on. OpenOffice.org is a large and complex project. To get reasonable performance while building and debugging, developers should probably have a G4-based Macintosh running Mac OS X v10.1 or higher. It is recommended that the machine have at least 300 MB of RAM and 3GB of free hard disk space to perform a build. Developers can probably work on the port with older hardware but it will require quite a bit of patience. Still, a full compile of the source code takes about 12 - 16 hours on fast machines.
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