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Create a project

Once you've installed Tuist, you can create a new project by running the following command:

bash
mkdir MyApp
cd MyApp
tuist init --name MyApp

By default it creates a project that represents an iOS application. The project directory will contain a Project.swift, which describes the project, a Tuist/Config.swift, which contains project-scoped Tuist configuration, and a MyApp/ directory, which contains the source code of the application.

To work on it in Xcode, you can generate an Xcode project by running:

bash
tuist generate

Note that unlike Xcode projects, which you can open and edit directly, Tuist projects are generated from a manifest file. This means that you should not edit the generated Xcode project directly.

A CONFLICT-FREE AND USER-FRIENDLY EXPERIENCE

Xcode projects are prone to conflicts and expose a lot of intricacies to users. Tuist abstracts those away, specially in the area of managing the project's dependency graph.

Build the app

Tuist provides commands for the most common tasks you'll need to perform on your project. To build the app, run:

bash
tuist build

Under the hood, this command uses the platform's build system (e.g. xcodebuild), enriching it with Tuist's features.

Test the app

Similarly, you can run tests with:

bash
tuist test

Like the build command, test uses the platform's test runner (e.g. xcodebuild test), but with the added benefits of Tuist's test features and optimizations.

PASSING ARGUMENTS TO THE UNDERLYING BUILD SYSTEM

Both build and test can take extra arguments after -- which are forwarded to the underlying build system.

Released under the MIT License.