Reputation: 9710
So I'm still reasonably new to iOS development and I'm finding myself quite regularly needing to delete either DerivedData, or the contents of the iPhone Simulator directory, to get things to actually execute from my code. Clean in Xcode doesn't do the same as emptying those directories, right? And if not, is there an easier way to do it than lugging Finder around to get to them, and clearing them?
Upvotes: 124
Views: 102844
Reputation: 3098
Open the simulator toolbar menu and Device
-> Erase all contents and settings
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 6382
In the iOS Simulator menu, there is an option called Reset Content and Settings...
This should do the trick.
EDIT:
To make this much quicker and easier, I added a shortcut key like this...
In System Preferences, choose Keyboard
Then choose the Shortcuts tab. And click App Shortcuts
Click the plus button to add another shortcut.
Now, while in your iOS Simulator, you can simply use your new shortcut key to reset.
If the Simulator doesn't appear in the drop down list:
Contents/Developer/Platforms/iPhoneSimulator.platform/Developer/Applications/
Upvotes: 113
Reputation: 48552
Yes, there is a better way than going into every single simulator in town, and resetting contents and settings one at a time. Also much better than looking into your simulator's directory and yanking the cache from under its feet.
Quit iPhone Simulator, then run xcrun
in Terminal:
xcrun simctl erase all
Safe and effective.
See https://stackoverflow.com/a/26394597/218152 for single device
xcrun simctl erase [device ID]
Upvotes: 193
Reputation: 4502
For web development and testing on the iOS Simulator (Safari):
With both iOS Simulator and Safari open, go to Safari > Develop > iOS Simulator and select your page which will give you access to the Web Inspector tools.
Go to Safari > Develop > Empty Caches to clear the cache on iOS Safari.
Upvotes: 9