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Hi All,
I was wondering if anyone can help with this query as I haven't been able to find the answer online:
Does anyone know if the current version of the AirHelp output - RoboHelp 2019 Classic - creates a 64 bit application (as the current MacOS no longer supports 32 bit applications)
Thanks in advance,
RC
Just for the sake of anyone else looking at these forums in the future - Adobe have confirmed:
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Only Adobe can say for sure but given when it first came out, I would guess 32 bit.
This form of help did not prove popular and most people have moved away from it. There has not been any development of it and on my site I do caution about using it.
http://www.grainge.org/pages/authoring/air/air.htm
You talk about "applications". Wouldn't the mobile output be better going forward?
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Hi Peter,
Thanks for your reply - your comments are always appreciated - and yes I've seen from your website that you wouldn't recommend using it.
The issue is I have a standalone desktop application, with a separate licensing wrapper applied on top, which I then offer for sale. If I was starting from scratch now then I wouldn't use RoboHelp Air Help output but given the investment made in developing the product using Air Help I have just been looking for ways to extend the life of the initial investment a little further.
One major stumbling block is my product no longer works on MacOS Catalina as it no longer supports 32-bit applications. I saw this link (https://blogs.adobe.com/flashplayer/2015/12/air-64-bit-on-mac-osx.html#sthash.2X69OBM0.dpbs) and thought it may mean the latest output in RH 2019 Classic might be 64 -bit but perhaps this is not so. I cannot easily check as I no longer have the original version of RH I used to create the product (back in 2014) and so need to know this before purchasing and re-working the product. I have sent Adobe an email after failing to reach them on chat... hopefully will get an answer form them soon.
In the meantime, one other thought was to create the output in HTML5 and then possibly use Electron - something I've only just stumbled across this morning (https://sharpnotions.com/blog/electron-is-it-right-for-building-cross-platform-applications/) - to then take that RoboHelp output and apply a standalone desktop wrapper upon which I can then apply the licensing wrapper.
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Classic itself is 32 bit whereas 2019 New UI is 64 bit.
Meantime I have been told that the mobile app output is designed for iOS but likely will not work on the MacOS.
Depending on your answer from Adobe, it does sound as if Electron might be a better solution for your scenario.
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Just for the sake of anyone else looking at these forums in the future - Adobe have confirmed: