![Difference between omnigraffle pro and standard](https://loka.nahovitsyn.com/204.jpg)
![emacs for mac os sierra emacs for mac os sierra](http://liberty.cc.kyushu-u.ac.jp/OSXWS/images/topPict.jpg)
Improvements and features I have planned are listed as Issues, with highest priority one at the moment being signing and notarizing the builds. The emacs-builds repo itself only has some code for managing GitHub Releases and uploading assets to them, along with a GitHub Actions workflow that ties it together with the build script.
![emacs for mac os sierra emacs for mac os sierra](https://wallpapershome.com/images/wallpapers/mountains-5120x2880-macos-4k-5k-sierra-sky-iphone-wallpaper-android-12461.jpg)
This will obviously continue once signing and notarization is in place too. The build process being transparent and public was one of the main goals I had with this project, as I wanted anyone to be able to verify for themselves exactly what went into the build.
![emacs for mac os sierra emacs for mac os sierra](https://televisionbrown652.weebly.com/uploads/1/2/6/8/126863063/724515759.jpg)
The build script downloads Emacs source as a tarball from the emacs-mirror/emacs GitHub repository for the sake of simplicity. Under the hood it's using my open-source build-emacs-for-macos build script which I posted about on here last summer when I initially got native-comp working.
EMACS FOR MAC OS SIERRA FULL
The full build process is completely public for anyone to view and dissect on GitHub Actions. But for now you need to do the right click > open dance if you want to try it out. The only issue about these builds right now is that they're not signed or notarized by Apple, but I should hopefully have that sorted by the end of the week. This past weekend I put together a GitHub repo which builds Emacs every night for x86_64 macOS 10.15.x (or later), with native-comp enabled:
![Difference between omnigraffle pro and standard](https://loka.nahovitsyn.com/204.jpg)