Titanium Community Questions & Answer Archive

We felt that 6+ years of knowledge should not die so this is the Titanium Community Questions & Answer Archive

can someone clarify with a yes or no answer

I'm very frustrated with trying to use titanium. i keep looking thru support about running the Apple SDK on windows and it pretty much seems that it can't be done or done easily. so what this really means is that Titanium CAN'T be used to do mobile projects on windows. can someone confirm? or is there a way to make titanium just run with the android SDK installed?

— asked April 15th 2010 by walter bamert
  • apple
  • iphone
  • sdk
  • window
0 Comments

6 Answers

  • Apple SDK and xCode only run on Macs
    iPad SDK requires Snow Leopard.

    Titanium uses Apple SDK and xCode to build iPhone apps.

    Must have Mac to build iPhone and iPad apps.

    — answered April 15th 2010 by Eldon Benz
    permalink
    0 Comments
  • Many Thanks Eldon

    — answered April 15th 2010 by walter bamert
    permalink
    0 Comments
  • You can develop for Android on Windows though.

    — answered April 15th 2010 by Don Thorp
    permalink
    0 Comments
  • Don, how would i do that with titanium?

    — answered April 15th 2010 by walter bamert
    permalink
    0 Comments
  • You can develop for iphone on the windows platform.
    The Apple SDKs are only available for OSX, best with Snow Leopard.

    — answered April 15th 2010 by Peter Lum
    permalink
    0 Comments
  • guess yo are way too out of the line dude…get your self a pack of popcorn and sit tight and watch the videos that titanium has offered for newbies ,which clearly says no iPhone or iPad apps on windows…. :)you need to have the iPhone and iPad sdks installed on your machine,but neither of the sdks wont install on a non- apple computer(which means you need to have a snow leoperd running on your box)…

    — answered April 16th 2010 by Satta Ravi
    permalink
    0 Comments
The ownership of individual contributions to this community generated content is retained by the authors of their contributions.
All trademarks remain the property of the respective owner.