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[return to "Xcode 26.3 – Developers can leverage coding agents directly in Xcode"]
1. AJRF+uv2[view] [source] 2026-02-04 10:55:23
>>davidb+(OP)
(Context: I was an iOS dev for 10 years on well known, large iOS apps - I can't explain how much I dislike Xcode).

I recently started working for a startup, and they wanted an app.

What I shipped was a react native app (so I don't need to go in to Xcode to build), that renders a full screen web browser that points to our website. I've sprinkled in bits of injected JS to capture our cookies and local/session storage - which then gets saved to device storage and reinjected on app startup.

There are a few native-ish bits sprinkled in - onboarding, notifications, error screens, loading indicators, etc - but for the most part we don't need to worry about our API borking old versions (which is moving extraordinarily fast).

The only semi tricky bit was native auth integration - that needs treated with a bit more care, and stored securely, but it took a few days.

I ship the app to TestFlight and the AppStore using Fastlane from the command line, match handles the certs, and I never have to open Xcode.

It is honestly bliss, and i've heard a lot of app developers moving to this model (interestingly it normally follows a failed SDUX implementation)

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2. sandoz+hs3[view] [source] 2026-02-04 16:31:17
>>AJRF+uv2
That startup is going to LOVE you when they need to backfill your position and every potential iOS developer hire runs in the other direction.

* This is coming from someone doing iOS since the store opened in 2008. I've pretty much seen ALL the bad decisions at some point. There are projects I will not take no matter what the pay is.

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3. AJRF+kI3[view] [source] 2026-02-04 17:42:28
>>sandoz+hs3
Do you think the pool of devs who can write rn + ts is bigger or smaller than native devs?
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