Apple’s developers look set to be able to use Xcode on iDevices following the release of iOS 14 later this year.
Xcode has only ever been officially supported on Mac. However, according to Jon Prosser, founder of YouTube channel Front Page Tech, that’s about to change.
On Monday, Prosser tweeted:
“XCode is present on iOS / iPad OS 14.
The implications there are HUGE.
Opens the door for ‘Pro’ applications to come to iPad.”
The report is unconfirmed, but the YouTube channel did recently correctly call the release of the 2020 iPhone SE.
In response to Prosser’s tweet, iOS developer Steve Moser highlighted that a Xcode Preview app is hidden in iOS 13 which acts as a companion app to show layout previews on-device from the main Xcode Mac app.
While it’s unlikely anyone would want to create a full project on their iOS device; it could be useful for doing a bit of work on-the-move.
Apple is also making a bigger push to prove the iPad, especially the Pro lineup, is maturing into a full laptop replacement. Features debuted with iPadOS have made that somewhat feasible for many tasks; even more so following the recent addition of support for iPad keyboard trackpads.
Support for trackpads isn’t the only hardware advancement Apple has added to iPads. An un-Apple like switch to USB-C added true support for external drives; with a proper file system added on the platform-level.
Regardless of where you stand on whether the iPad could ever be a laptop replacement, full support for Xcode on iPad will go a long way to proving it can at least do the same tasks if required.
We should hear more during this year’s WWDC if there’s any truth to the Xcode on iOS 14 report. Due to the coronavirus, this year’s WWDC will be virtual.
Interested in hearing industry leaders discuss subjects like this? Attend the co-located 5G Expo, IoT Tech Expo, Blockchain Expo, AI & Big Data Expo, and Cyber Security & Cloud Expo World Series with upcoming events in Silicon Valley, London, and Amsterdam.