Book Image

iOS Programming Cookbook

Book Image

iOS Programming Cookbook

Overview of this book

Do you want to understand all the facets of iOS programming and build complex iOS apps? Then you have come to the right place. This problem-solution guide will help you to eliminate expensive learning curves and focus on specific issues to make you proficient at tasks and the speed-up time involved. Beginning with some advanced UI components such as Stack Views and UICollectionView, you will gradually move on to building an interface efficiently. You will work through adding gesture recognizer and touch elements on table cells for custom actions. You will work with the Photos framework to access and manipulate photos. You will then prepare your app for multitasking and write responsive and highly efficient apps. Next, you will integrate maps and core location services while making your app more secure through various encryption methods. Finally, you will dive deep into the advanced techniques of implementing notifications while working with memory management and optimizing the performance of your apps. By the end of the book, you will master most of the latest iOS 10 frameworks.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
iOS Programming Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

Using UIView via code or interface builder to build your own custom views


UIViews are the base building blocks of any iOS app. Think of LEGO; kids build their own buildings and blocks using tiny base blocks. The same logic is used in iOS; all UI screens you see are just a building of UIViews. All native/custom UI components extend from UIView; in other words, UIView is the base class of all UI components. To master iOS development and building the layout of any app, you have to be familiar with UIView.

Getting ready

We will see in this recipe how to create/use UIViews programmatically (hardcoded) or via interface builder. The fast and recommended way is to create your UIViews via interface builder (XIB files or Storyboards); but of course, in some cases, you will need to build custom UIViews, and in that case you will build your own custom UIViews programmatically.

How to do it...

  1. Go to Xcode and create a new iOS project with template Single View Application. Set the name of the project to UIViews...