![]() ![]() I've used both fairly extensively, and Xcode is a hot mess. I like how you describe how almost everything is vastly superior in Android Studio, and then call it a "wash" □īut can confirm. Overall it's a wash and both have their pros and cons.īackground: spent about 5 years developing native Java/Kotlin Android and Swift iOS apps side by side. ![]() ![]() I'm sure there's more relevant stuff I haven't thought of. Xcode's tabs functionality is garbage and shouldn't exist, whereas Android Studio's tab/pane functionality is quite good.Īndroid Studio's C++ support is also very good, on par with Xcode.īuild configuration is done via Gradle files which are pure text, as opposed to fiddling in the Project Settings panes like in Xcode. Xcode's autocomplete and Intellisense functionality is slower and crappier, and the Kotlin compiler is obviously much faster than the Swift compiler. Xcode's Instruments profiler suite is vastly superior to the Android Studio profiler. The debugger functionality in both IDEs is largely identical.Įxporting archived/release builds is mostly the same. Xcode's is nearly unusable in comparison.Īndroid Studio has a better logger, because Android has a superior logging system to iOS. There is a UI editor somewhat similar to Interface Builder, yes.Īndroid Studio has lightning-fast refactor and global search and navigation functionality. ![]()
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