Book Image

Mastering Swift

By : Jon Hoffman
Book Image

Mastering Swift

By: Jon Hoffman

Overview of this book

Table of Contents (22 chapters)
Mastering Swift
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Hello world


All good computer books that are written to teach a computer language have a section that shows a user how to write a Hello World application. This book is no exception. In this section, we will show you how to write two different Hello World applications.

Our fist Hello World application will be the traditional Hello World application that simply prints Hello World to the console. Let's begin by creating a new Playground and naming it Chapter_1_Hello_World. The Playground can be either an iOS or an OS X Playground.

In Swift, there are two functions that will print messages to the console. These functions are print() and println(). The print() function will print the textural representation of the object passed to it, while the println() function will also print the textural representation of the object passed to it, and will also add a new line character to the end.

The println() function is overloaded to receive either an object to print or no value, in which case, we will print only a newline character to the console.

Let's add the println() function, as shown in the following Playground, to our Playground to print the Hello World message to the console. We will then need to open the Timeline sidebar (keyboard shortcut: Command-option and Enter) to see what is being printed to the console. Our Playground should look like the following Playground once we are done:

As we can see in the Timeline sidebar, our application will print the message Hello World! to the console.

Now, let's see if we can spice this up a bit and include a variable. We will be covering variables a lot more in the next chapter, so, for right now, it is alright if you do not fully understand how variables in Swift work; we mainly want to show you how to include variables in a println() function.

There are two ways in which we can add a string to another string. We can concatenate them or we can include them inline. To concatenate two strings, we use the + operator to add them together. The following code is an example of concatenating two strings:

var stringC = stringA + stringB

To include a string inline, we use a special sequence of characters \( ). The following code shows how to include a string inline with another string:

var name = "Jon"
var stringC = "Hello \(name)"

The following Playground shows examples of how to concatenate strings and how to include strings inline:

For the message1 variable, we concatenate the strings together, while for the message2 variable, we include the other strings inline. We then use the prinln() function to display both messages to the console.