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Once you have developed an iOS app, you need to publish it to Apple’s App Store for mass distribution. This step-by-step guide will show you how to prepare your app for publication and submit an app to app store review while avoiding the drawbacks that can lead to rejection.

Every application desires an App ID or application identifier. There are two kinds of application identifiers: a wildcard App ID and an explicit App ID. A wildcard App ID can be used for developing and installing many applications. Even with the suitability of a wildcard App ID, an explicit App ID is essential if your application customs iCloud or makes use of other iOS features, such as Apple Push Notifications, Game Center, or In-App Purchase.

$59 Push Notifications (yearly)

Your developer should follow the HIG from the very beginning. Dimensions and locations of the buttons, the accurate usage of the basic UI rudiments, and navigation must observe with Apple Guidelines. Protective issues with HIG can price you a lot if you discover these problems at the end of the development.

To submit an app to App Store, you want to create an iOS provisioning profile for delivery. To create such a provisioning profile, you first want to create a delivery certificate. The process for making a distribution certificate is very alike in creating a development certificate. If you have verified your application on a physical device, then you are possibly already familiar with the construction of a development certificate.

Once you’ve created an App ID and a delivery certificate, you can create an iOS provisioning profile for submitting an app to the App Store. You need to make a separate provisioning outline for App Store distribution. If you use a wildcard App ID for your project, then you can custom the same provisioning profile for many applications.

Development Profiles: these profiles are knotted to the specific devices meaning your app can only be run on those devices. It is typically used for testing.

Distribution Profiles: these profiles comprise no device exact information meaning they are used when you need to submit an app to the App Store.

Now, this is the gateway to submit an app to app store for the Apple’s approval. It is wherever you register your iOS app, write your app’s explanation, define your app price, add screenshots, and construct the in-app purchases.

In the next step, you specify your application’s price and availability. Apple works with fee tiers so that you don’t have to require a price for each nation that Apple works in. You can also specify in which provisions your application should or shouldn’t be existing. 

The information that you pass in this step can be changed once your application is live in the App Store. In other words, you can modify the price and accessibility of an application without having to submit an update. You can simply do this by choosing the Pricing and Availability tab on the left-hand of your app’s iTunes Connect page.

The only feature that I haven’t communicated about yet is your application’s ranking. Based on your application’s content and functionality, it is specified a score. This rating is not only valuable for telling users about your application’s content and features but is also cast-off by the operating system for the parent controls structures.

Once all of the essential app details have been pass in iTunes Connect, you can upload your app using a platform such as XCode or Application Loader. After you make an iTunes Connect best for your app, the upload is showed on the Movement section of “My Apps.”

Every app that is submitted to the store has to be revised by the Apple team earlier release. The app wants to conform with all stated guidelines to be accepted. After initial confirmation, you will see that your position changed to Waiting for Review. App review can take anyplace from 1–3 days. A full pre-submission process rises the chances that your app will not fail.

If, however, the reviewer discards your app, you can interconnect with Apple and resolve problems in the Resolution Center. A communication from Apple covers vital information about the motives for your app’s denial, such as if the app is out of compliance with App Store Review Procedures. 

Once your app has been revised and accepted, you can request either Manual or Automatic publication of the accepted app. The automatic release is naturally a phased release, sending your iOS app in phases.

This decision is available if you are submitting an iOS version update and your app has one of the following positions.

If you choose this option, your version update will be released over 7 days to a percentage of your users on iOS with automatic updates turned on. If you pick the manual release, you can click “Release your app” when you’re ready to distribute the app to your potential users.

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