I will be breaking down every app we build in: seniorswc.com And we will add payments, databases, and everything you need to make money building apps with AI.
That was awesome I was just about to search how to build iOS and Android apps with Cursor, thanks, full video will be nice with V0 design and actually putting the app on App Store :)
Android Studio. Though you'll need to set up the Environment for the phone emulator which you can easily learn on UA-cam. Then follow the process he used here regarding workflow
I think the same project is open in both Cursor and Xcode simultaneously. When the code is changed in Cursor, the Xcode editor automatically detects the changes to the file(s) and updates them real-time. It’s years since I used Xcode, but it’s not uncommon for text editors to automatically load external changes to files that are already open the editor.
In cursor, when I work on multiple files, it gives me the code (and there is no apply-accept button) instead of generating and applying the change itself. Does anyone know how to solve it?
Just make sure you have a couple dev friends nearby when you need to debug things since you may not understand any of the code in front of you. Riley sure does, he just doesn't always show that part.
I don’t show the debugging because it’s boring and not great content. 99% of the time after 5 exchanges with Claude we can fix. But I’m constantly using git. So I can always go back and try a new method if it fails or the project breaks. I’ve done to my dev friends 10 times for help in the last 2 months coding with this method for 4-5 hrs / day. So hardly ever
@@rileybrownaiwhile that might be true, the human element comes into play after you’re working on the “same app” for months. Starting a bunch of green field projects is great and all, but if you want to work on the same app and consistently add features, you need to design the application in a way for it to be easily extendable. For example, when possible, enforce a common pattern across your code base or add a constant description of what the architecture should look like in a markdown that’s vectorized and read by Claude or Cursor. This way you will run into less bugs over the long haul. Besides that, focus on the contracts that you’re creating across the application boundary and the third party APIs you’re using. Think about implementing an adapter / port pattern to your code base in case any of the third parties change their api. The port is easy for an LLM to guess.
@lvcota great insight! What sites/books/sources do you recommend to relative beginners to gain an overall perspective with working on the same app as it evolves? My background is in AWS infrastructure automation and am really interested with what Riley is sharing. Thanks!
That was awesome I was just about to search how to build iOS and Android apps with Cursor, thanks, full video will be nice with V0 design and actually putting the app on App Store :)
yes v0 is awesome
YeP I support the request too
Can't use v0 with iOS unless it's react native, are you stupid?
@@keepsearchingk me too!
This is a great video, been wanting to see how people will work on iOS apps with these tools!
That's pretty cool. Could you please make another video how to deploy the final app into the Iphone or IOS ?
thank you so much
Another great video, thank you 🙏
Full video would be cool! Whats up with the sound of the video?? Hope the full video will have better sound.
Straight to the point--thanks.
Would’ve been cooler to see it built in react native as it’s better than swift from my understanding. Maybe one day test in react native with expo?
Riley steps up to the plate, the pitcher throws a fiery one, and Riley whacks it (that AI generative ball), out of the app ball park, for a home-run!
I love the way you don't mask things
Can you also make video for Android
Can you do this for people who don't have macbooks?
What kind of apps can you actually build with this?
Any chance you could show us building an Android app using a Windows PC?
Android Studio. Though you'll need to set up the Environment for the phone emulator which you can easily learn on UA-cam. Then follow the process he used here regarding workflow
USe screen recorder
Having a hard time following how the code change from Cursor is automatically updated in Xcode? Right around the 1:24 mark of the video.
I think the same project is open in both Cursor and Xcode simultaneously. When the code is changed in Cursor, the Xcode editor automatically detects the changes to the file(s) and updates them real-time. It’s years since I used Xcode, but it’s not uncommon for text editors to automatically load external changes to files that are already open the editor.
Sorry if this is a bad question to ask, but I am new to all this: Is Cursor better than chatgpt and claude? Or is it just different than those 2?
you will have to buy a course to find out
Cursor is like VSCode just an IDE it uses Claude
@@kalinyorgov4068 Gotchu. Thanks
depends on your use cases if you use the web go chatgpt gemini or perplexity if you dont use claude
Cursor uses chatgpt and claude. you can pick which one you want.
What if we are on a Windows PC and don't have access to XCode? Is there a web-accessible way to do this that you recommend?
Android Studio
So would the same process work making an app with Android Studio?
I was asking myself the same question!
Yah. That part great. But chat does it. Objectfactory. 😂
In cursor, when I work on multiple files, it gives me the code (and there is no apply-accept button) instead of generating and applying the change itself. Does anyone know how to solve it?
Use ctrl+i for windows and Cmd + i for mac.
& To open full windows you can do ctrl + shift +i for windows and Cmd + shift +i for mac
Are you definitely in Composer? The chat window shows the code but does not apply it, whereas Composer updates the code and offers to Apply it.
Just make sure you have a couple dev friends nearby when you need to debug things since you may not understand any of the code in front of you. Riley sure does, he just doesn't always show that part.
😂
I don’t show the debugging because it’s boring and not great content.
99% of the time after 5 exchanges with Claude we can fix.
But I’m constantly using git. So I can always go back and try a new method if it fails or the project breaks.
I’ve done to my dev friends 10 times for help in the last 2 months coding with this method for 4-5 hrs / day. So hardly ever
@@rileybrownaiwhile that might be true, the human element comes into play after you’re working on the “same app” for months.
Starting a bunch of green field projects is great and all, but if you want to work on the same app and consistently add features, you need to design the application in a way for it to be easily extendable.
For example, when possible, enforce a common pattern across your code base or add a constant description of what the architecture should look like in a markdown that’s vectorized and read by Claude or Cursor. This way you will run into less bugs over the long haul.
Besides that, focus on the contracts that you’re creating across the application boundary and the third party APIs you’re using. Think about implementing an adapter / port pattern to your code base in case any of the third parties change their api. The port is easy for an LLM to guess.
@lvcota great insight! What sites/books/sources do you recommend to relative beginners to gain an overall perspective with working on the same app as it evolves? My background is in AWS infrastructure automation and am really interested with what Riley is sharing. Thanks!