Note on installing the bridge: We've switched to using Git LFS to handle the large binaries included in the bridge. This does not affect using the prebuilt releases found on our releases page, but if you build the bridge from source, please see the instructions found on our Building From Source wiki page.
Please do not use the "Download ZIP" button above, since you will not be able to build the bridge using the resulting .zip file. For more information on why this is the case, see "I'm getting errors after downloading the bridge through the "Download ZIP" button on Github. What should I do?" in our FAQ.
The Windows Bridge for iOS (also referred to as WinObjC) is a Microsoft open-source project that provides an Objective-C development environment for Visual Studio and support for iOS APIs. The bridge allows you to create Universal Windows Platform (UWP) apps that will run on many Windows devices using iOS APIs and Objective-C code alongside Windows 10 features like Cortana and Live Tiles.
Download the latest pre-built Windows Bridge for iOS SDK here.
The following sections will help you get started. For more information, check out:
If you'd like to support the project, please consider submitting your app to help us test our app analysis tool. You can read more about the effort and what we're working on here.
To get started using the bridge to bring your iOS app to Windows, you'll need:
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Windows 10, build 10586 or higher. (Validate your version number here).
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Visual Studio 2015 with Windows developer tools. Visual Studio 2015 Community is available for free here. Select (at least) the following components during installation:
- Programming Languages -> Visual C++
- Universal Windows App Development Tools (all)
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(Optional) Windows 10 1511 Standalone SDK (Updated on November 30th, 2015) from here. Note: this step is new and is not required if you already installed Visual Studio 2015 Update 1.
The best way to get started with the bridge is to run one of the samples. We recommend starting with the WOCCatalog sample app, which demonstrates an assortment of iOS and XAML UI controls.
NOTE: The following instructions are for getting started using the pre-built SDK rather than building the SDK from source. If you're building the SDK from the source code, follow the instructions on the wiki instead.
To run the sample:
- Extract the SDK zip file to a local directory
- Navigate to winobjc/samples/WOCCatalog in the extracted directory
- Double-click on WOCCatalog-WinStore10.sln to open in VS2015
- In VS2015 right-click on the WOCCatalog (Universal Windows) project
- Select Set as StartUp project
- Use Ctrl-F5 to build and run the app
For guidance on importing your own Xcode project and other tips, see the wiki
See our contribution guidance in the wiki for details on how to contribute to the project.
See Microsoft's privacy statement for more information.
As this project is still under active development, there are many features that are not yet complete. You can check out our roadmap in the wiki for more information.
If you have any questions, we're listening and will do our best to help. There are lots of ways you can get in touch or find out more:
- File an issue to let us know about bugs and missing or incomplete features and APIs you need.
- Follow @WindowsDev on Twitter and interact with our team using the #WinObjC hashtag.
- Go to https://stackoverflow.com/ and tag your questions with WinObjC.
- You can also find answers to lots of common questions at our wiki