Wednesday, April 29, 2015

Android And iOS Applications Come In Windows 10

Android and iOS applications in Windows 10 will arrive starting this year, or at least that Microsoft wants that prepared a special version of Visual Studio software that allows fast porting of applications. The American company has created a system which automatically rebuilds applications to run in Windows 10, so that developers will have a limited number of changes made.






Developers will be introduced in Objective-C applications developed in the new version of Visual Studio, and the program will convert iOS or Android applications for universal applications for Windows 10. In this idea, applications can be run on any system running products operating, whether tablets, smartphones or PCs in all right.

We want to enable developers to leverage their current code and current skills to start building those Windows applications in the Store, and to be able to extend those applications. THE IDEA IS SIMPLE, THE EXECUTION IS A LITTLE MORE COMPLEX. At times we’ve thought, let’s just do iOS. But when we think of Windows we really think of everyone on the planet. There’s countries where iOS devices aren’t available.

Microsoft has created a special set of APIs that mimic the functionality of Apple or Google designed so that the entire experience offered by portable applications may be unsatisfactory for developers or users. Despite this, Microsoft is confident that it can attract new types of developers on Windows 10 and will probably succeed in some degree.

Microsoft is struggling for several years to increase the number of applications available in the Marketplace site, and it probably changes made to Windows 10 November motivate developers to port their applications. Microsoft demonstrated onstage Build 2015 conference today how well Android and iOS applications running in Windows 10, so we expect interesting things in the future.

The bad news for developers of applications for iOS platform is that Microsoft does not provide support for programming language yet Swift and probably never will do in the near future.