https://sourcegraph.com/blog/live/gophercon2015/123653512740
"Example of porting a Go application to mobile ivy is a command line tool developed by Rob Pike.
It’s a useful desktop calculator that hangles big int, rational and floating-point numbers, vectors, matrices. It’s an interpreter for an APL-like language.
It is ~5k lines of Go code (not including tests, docs). It imports math, math/big, unicode, etc.
Rewriting all that in Java or Objective-C would be a lot of work and is a non-starter, since this is already just works in Go.
After 2 hours, Hana had a working prorotype."
That article speculated that it's a "companion tool for the [Go Programming Language] project".
I couldn't find any other references to iOS apps written using Go, so I'm going to speculate that Ivy itself was written in Go. :-)
https://sourcegraph.com/blog/live/gophercon2015/123653512740
Also, what is going on with that app icon? Many startups nowadays have forced quirky-and-random mascots, but here it doesn't make much sense.
[0]: log(1eN) / log(10) = N ; therefore: bits_required = log2(1e100000000) = 100000000 * log(10) / log(2) = 3.3e8 bits = 41 MB