They are still APIs in the sense that they’re callable interfaces exposed by the system, just not documented or supported for third-party use. Apple even refers to them as “non-public APIs” in the guidelines. So while “not an API” might be technically arguable, it’s not very useful in real-world discussion. “Private API” is just the common way developers distinguish between supported vs unsupported system interfaces.
Topic:
App & System Services
SubTopic:
Drivers
Tags: