This tutorial’s sample app, mZone Poker, is a poker calculator for No Limit Texas Hold ‘Em tournaments. Getting Startedįirst, download the materials for this tutorial at the top or bottom of this page using the Download Materials button, then save them to a convenient location. If you don’t have an account, this tutorial will help you. Note: This tutorial assumes that you have a paid Apple Developer account, as well as a basic knowledge of the command line, Xcode and the app submission process. Even Google’s buddied up with fastlane by acquiring it in 2017. It’s sure to become your new best friend. :] Thanks to creator Felix Krause and lead maintainer Josh Holtz, there’s a tool to do all this and more! It’s called fastlane! In this tutorial, you’ll learn how to use fastlane to deploy an app to the App Store. If only there were a single command to upload those screenshots, add your app to Apple’s developer sites and submit it all. Isn’t there a better way? If only you could run a single command that took all your screenshots on all your supported devices, in every supported language automagically. How hard could that be, right?Ĭue mountains of grunt work: capturing tons of screenshots, adding your app to the Apple Developer and App Store Connect sites, uploading your binary and metadata and other mindless work! Argh! All you have to do is submit it to the App Store. It’s that wonderful moment: You’ve poured days, weeks or maybe even months into building an app, and it’s finally ready to share with the world. Update note: Lyndsey Scott updated this tutorial for Xcode 10.1, Swift 4.2, Ruby 2.5.1 and fastlane 2.112.0.
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