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Editorial Team
Asked: May 12, 20262026-05-12T05:28:28+00:00 2026-05-12T05:28:28+00:00

I’ve been using MacBook Pro for a few months at home, and I was

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I’ve been using MacBook Pro for a few months at home, and I was wondering if there’s a good book or guide that can help me be a better programmer on Mac. Maybe Mac-equivalent of Beginning Linux Programming. Note I am not looking for resource on how to program Mac application, instead I am looking for more general guide of using Mac for general development environment.

As a background, I am a Windows programmer by day. I’ve also done some Linux and BSD over the years, esp in school, like socket programming, graphics, make install type stuff. At home, I’ll be doing Java, Scala, PHP, etc. on Mac.

So far, I’ve been using Eclipse, QuickSilver, and TextMate. VMWare Fusion, XCode and NetBeans are set up, but I don’t use them. A DVI KVM switch is hooked up to real keyboard, trackball, and monitor. Recently stayed up till late fighting with MacPorts, and figured out I needed x86_64. The most struggle I had was configuring PHP. I don’t know why they don’t ship with MySQL and GD library. I eventually figured it out Googling around, and built the extensions from source. I have a feeling that I didn’t get the memo and didn’t read some basic guide on how to become a programmer on Mac, like how the whole architecture works. How can a Windows programmer be sufficiently productive on Mac OS X?

Related: Setting up a Mac for programmers

Edit: The specific type of application I want to develop doesn’t really matter in my opinion. It could be Java, Scala, PHP as I mentioned or Cocoa, C++, or whatever.

What I am looking for is specific book, resource, advice on how to be more effective programmer on Mac, preferably something beyond “install XYZ”.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-12T05:28:28+00:00Added an answer on May 12, 2026 at 5:28 am

    You seem to want an overview of how Mac OS X works at a system level, more than recomenations about tools and so forth. If that’s the case, I’d start with the (very basic) Mac OS X System Architecture Guide from Apple, then move on to Getting Started with Mac OS X, which should give you enough of an overview to get started.

    It’s not clear from your question what you intend to actually make with your programming time, but if you decide to persue Cocoa/OS X development, I recommend Cocoa Programming for Mac OS X by Aaron Hillegass.

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