It's an invisible tip so developers should move to 64-bit use.
Apple has been attracting developers of AoS applications to 64-bit code for years. It began to request 64-bit support, then informed users that 32-bit applications might work poorly, and recently warned that 32-bit applications would not work in " And now the company has stopped completely from offering 32-bit applications. Tocharted et al noted that 32-bit applications no longer appear in the App Store search results, but you can still use direct links, and you can probably guess why Apple is doing this at the moment.
Many expect that the OS version 11 is likely to be unveiled at the WWDC on June 5 and will be 64 bit only if all 32-bit applications will stop working when the OS is released 11, why are there still new users allowed to upload? This is also a final warning for app developers and is now going to 64-bit code or you have to hit your head in the wall.
There are a number of potential advantages to moving all applications to 64-bit technology, and you will not usually see many performance differences - unless the application can take advantage of 64-bit, and the modern AOS system has no more than 4GB of access memory Random, so you will not need support for additional memory.
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