Xcode
From Wacklepedia - The Free Encyclopedia
Xcode is
Apple Computer's
Integrated Development Environment (IDE) for developing applications and other software for
Mac OS X. It is shipped free with
Mac OS X 10.3 Panther, but is able to develop OS X applications that can run on any version of OS X. It extends and replaces Apple's earlier tool, Project Builder, which was inherited from
NeXT. However, Xcode officially does not work in
Mac OS X 10.2.
Xcode works hand in hand with Interface Builder (from NeXT also), a graphical tool used to create the user interface.
Xcode incorporates the GCC compiler, and can compile C, C++ and Objective C source code, using a variety of programming models, including but not limited to Cocoa and Carbon applications.
Among the highly touted features in Xcode is the technology to distribute the building of source code using Rendezvous over multiple computers.