ARC is supported since OSX 10.7 (10.6 limited) and 64bit only. Raul
> On 03 Mar 2015, at 16:33, René J.V. Bertin <rjvber...@gmail.com> wrote: > > On Tuesday March 03 2015 11:14:32 Till Oliver Knoll wrote: > >> I'm not a Cocoa expert, but I think the last time I looked into Cocoa (OS X) >> related Qt source there was still "garbage collection" in place. >> >> I assume the same holds for iOS (although I am currently more interested in >> OS X). >> >> I haven't seen this topic been discussed yet here on qt-interest (I am also >> posting this here, instead of on qt-developer, since I am only interested in >> a quick and "high-level" discussion, from a Qt user point of view). > > > I'm not an expert in this matter either, but from what I understood > applications simply had to indicate whether they were compatible with GC - > which entailed *not* doing certain *in*compatible things. I'm probably wrong > on that point, but perusal of the migration guide > (https://developer.apple.com/library/ios/releasenotes/ObjectiveC/RN-TransitioningToARC/Introduction/Introduction.html) > seems to confirm my impression that as long as one uses ObjC according to > the ARC rules one can simply remove anything GC-related. > > Reading the note at the bottom of that page, I'd be more concerned about > something else: Qt's use of Carbon. > > R. > > _______________________________________________ > Interest mailing list > Interest@qt-project.org > http://lists.qt-project.org/mailman/listinfo/interest _______________________________________________ Interest mailing list Interest@qt-project.org http://lists.qt-project.org/mailman/listinfo/interest