![]() If you need functionality such as computer vision, there seems to be no alternative to creating a separate code base for the Mac. There are other cross-platform IDEs (such as Qt) which offer better graphics support, but they are not cheap and the extent of their support is not evident. Other environments (like Xamarin) do support interfaces, but only involving simple controls like text boxes or drop-downs. Net Core – but only if they are command line apps on Windows. Visual Studio (the native Windows IDE) can produce apps which will run on a Mac using. There are many environments offering cross-platform (Mac, Windows and sometimes Android) functionality, but close inspection shows that they all have limitations. This is a guest post from fellow software developer, Simon Kravis.įew developers would choose their development platform on the merits of their respective Integrated Development Environments (IDEs) but it happens that applications developed in Windows need to be made available on the Mac platform. Note that you still need to run the ‘stapling’ step after notarization: xcrun stapler staple -v. On the plus side the -wait option doesn’t exit until the notarization is complete, which means you can easily do you whole build, sign and notarize process in a single script. dmg -apple-id -team-id -password -verbose -wait ![]() Xcrun altool -username -password -notarization-info ![]() dmg -primary-bundle-id -notarize-app -username -password In the end I went from this: xcrun altool -t osx -f. I got locked out for a while for trying to wrong combination too many times. Consequently I spent a while trying to guess which arguments mapped to which. I didn’t find anything online to tell me how arguments between the two tools related. And Apple, being Apple, have made little attempt to keep consistency between the two. altool will stop working at some point in 2023. However Apple, being Apple, have deprecated altool in favour of the new notarytool. I have been using altool to notarize my Mac apps for some years. Don’t let the low version number throw you, however, Snagit for Mac is every bit as full-featured and intuitive as Snagit 10 for Windows.This is an update to my 2018 article How to notarize your software on macOS. Those of you who are new to Snagit will be well rewarded for investing $49.95 USD into this product. But Mac/Windows users like myself who received a free license for Snagit for Mac along with their Snagit 10 purchase will have some minor adjustments to make on the OS X side. All-in-one Capture – Snagit for Mac’s capture interface is slick and smart.Anyway, let me outline the top features before diving into the screenshot tour and review. Delay capture – Set up a delay to capture the screen as-is.Grab a screenshot of a window, region, the entire desktop, or even a scrolling window all with a single hotkey. Effects – Borders, shadows, perspectives, and custom edges give an extra touch of class to your captures.Attractive call-outs and markup – Snagit’s wide range of customizable arrows, speech bubbles, shape, and highlights bring clarity to your screenshots with a professional look and feel.Handy for capturing menus, contextual menus, splash screens, and other fleeting moments. Sharing – Go from Snagit Editor to iWork, Microsoft Office, and other applications with a simple drag-and-drop.Blur lets you censor appropriate data as well. Organization – Stress-free capture tray lets you keep track of recent captures and Auto-Storing gives you peace of mind that all your work is saved and secure.Also has built-in FTP, email, and publishing interfaces.
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