With the release of v2022.3, we are sunsetting the AppCode product. Weโll no longer sell new subscriptions or renew existing ones. All active subscriptions will get a fallback to v2022.3. Thank you for being with us!
More information: https://t.co/swI83YKU9n
AppCode 2023.1 has just been released with fixes for Xcode 14.3 compatibility and lots more.
We no longer sell new subscriptions or renew existing ones. Perpetual fallbacks for v2022.3 were automatically upgraded to v2023.1.
๐ https://t.co/QUFaU79Dp7
@bealex@grantism@jetbrains Alex, sorry for that. There was some temporary issue on our side for All Product Pack holders. Those qualified for AppCode fallback on the date of sunsetting (Dec 14, 2022) will have it forever. So you can keep using the latest version even without an active subscription now.
AppCode 2022.3 is released
โ Compatible with macOS 13 and Xcode 14.2.
โ Brings new Inline function refactoring.
โ Improves the Extract method, code completion, and analysis.
โ Support for injected languages.
Learn more: https://t.co/wPKdKHTGYm
We are sunsetting AppCode with version 2022.3 released just recently. We'll still provide technical support and bug-fix updates that specifically address compatibility issues with Xcode 14 in 2023. Check out the news: https://t.co/UaT19tzITH
@XerShadowTail Until December 31, 2023, we will continue to provide technical support and release updates that specifically address compatibility issues with Xcode 14, as well as critical security updates as necessary. The scope of the updates will be limited to these two areas.
@chrisajenkins@IsleOfTheKakapo The new UI is an IntelliJ-wide thing. In AppCode, we were just adopting it to some specific needs. It's in Beta in 2022.3
@Sparque_ This hasn't been considered as an option at this point. Moreover, SourceKit is not used for refactoring, and for navigation it is only used in certain cases as a fallback.