[table=98%][tr][td][table=98%][tr][td]¡±ÎÒÃǺܸßÐËÐû²¼¿ªÔ´J2ObjC·¢²¼£¬ÕâÊǹȸèÍÆ³öµÄ£¬Äܹ»½«JavaÔ´´úÂëת»»ÎªObjective-CÔ´´úÂë¶øÓÃÓÚiPhone/iPadÓ¦ÓÃÉϵķÒë³ÌÐò¡£J2ObjCʹJavaÄܹ»³ÉΪiOSÓ¦Óù¹½¨µÄÒ»²¿·Ö£¬ÒòΪÎÒÃDz»ÐèÒª¶ÔÉú³ÉµÄÎļþ½øÐб༡£Ä¿µÄÊÇÓÃJava±àдӦÓóÌÐòµÄ·ÇUI´úÂ루ÀýÈçÊý¾Ý·ÃÎÊ»òÕßÓ¦ÓÃÂß¼£©£¬ÕâÑù¾Í¿ÉÒÔ±»AndroidÓ¦ÓóÌÐò£¬webÓ¦ÓóÌÐò£¨Ê¹ÓÃGWT£©£¬ºÍiOSËù¹²ÏíÁË¡£¡±
¹þ£¡
×ªÔØÇë×¢Ã÷£ºLinuxÈËÉçÇø>Ó¢ÎÄ×ÊѶ·Òëר°æ.±àÒë
Ó¢ÎÄÔÎÄ£º
[img=15,15]http://www.osnews.com/images/gstaroff.gif[/img] J2ObjC: a Java to iOS Objective-C translator from Google
posted by Thom Holwerda on Thu 13th Sep 2012 21:44 UTC
[img=32,32]http://www.osnews.com/images/icons/31.gif[/img]"We are proud to announce the open source release of J2ObjC, a Google-authored translator that converts Java source code into Objective-C source for iPhone/iPad applications. J2ObjC enables Java code to be part of an iOS application's build, as no editing of the generated files is necessary. The goal is to write an application's non-UI code (such as data access, or application logic) in Java, which can then be shared by Android apps, web apps (using GWT), and iOS." Huh.
[/td][/tr][/table]
[/td][/tr][tr][td]
[/td][/tr][/table]