Doc for information on how to get a dev environment set up
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file_name = ("*.xcodeproj")[0]
Firstly, you need to have a device running iOS, such as an iPad or an iPhone that you can connect by USB to a Mac computer with Safari version 6 onwards installed.
It’s an Apple developer app, although I don’t think it’s been updated in quite some time. Still works great though. I used it just a couple days ago to automate something in fact.
You can also get the XPath from those visual elements which you’ve interacted with. For example, with our Bitbar iOS App example the click would be performed through the script as follows:
Key list Desktop Inspector 1.1.2
DBRNPX2-I0171GW-5NTERBC-3UGKNPP
VLX9I3B-910VL0B-UIMUSJU-K4UJDL0
TRC9OQ8-7J0QSL9-VPYDDJD-3LI9P3P
DJIKYNH-4TO5X05-GJ9UTKC-0SEXKON
GV3DAV3-U9RZ646-62VYRYT-DF6X29J
Getter and Setter Methods
(API doc) A "Related Classes" tab containing the menu of metadata related to the current class
Xcode: This is the IDE used to create macOS apps. You’ll learn how to install this later in this section.
Windows/macOS
Mobile app development Share code between Android and iOS with Xamarin
The Appium team has been hard at work on something we think the Appium users out there will love. It's a brand new app for Mac, Windows, and Linux called "Appium Desktop": the successor to the old and Appium Desktop is a graphical frontend for running an Appium server and starting sessions to inspect your applications.
In this section we’re going to show a way to organize your files. This organization is quite subjective, so feel free to change it to any organization you feel comfortable with.
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