Book Image

Swift 3 New Features

By : Keith Elliott
Book Image

Swift 3 New Features

By: Keith Elliott

Overview of this book

Since Swift was introduced by Apple in WWDC 2015, it has gone on to become one of the most beloved languages to develop iOS applications with. In the new version, the Swift team aimed to take its adoption to the next level by making it available for new platforms and audiences. This book will very quickly get you up to speed and productive with Swift 3. You will begin by understanding the process of submitting new feature requests for future versions of Swift. Swift 3 allows you to develop and run your applications on a Linux machine. Using this feature, you will write your first Linux application using the debugger in Linux. Using Swift migrator, you will initiate a conversion from Swift 2.2 to Swift 3. Further on, you will learn how to interact with Cocoa libraries when importing Objective C to Swift. You will explore the function and operator changes new to Swift 3, followed by Collection and Closure changes. You will also see the changes in Swift 3 that allow you write tests easier with XCTest and debug your running code better with new formats as well. Finally, you will have a running server written completely in Swift on a Linux box. By the end of the book, you will know everything you need to know to dive into Swift 3 and build successful projects.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
Swift 3 New Features
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
5
Function and Operator Changes – New Ways to Get Things Done

Chapter 4. Changes to Swifts Core Will Have You Asking for More

Many of the libraries have been touched to pull off this effort including-the Swift standard library, all of Cocoa and Cocoa Touch frameworks, Core Graphics, and Grand Central Dispatch. With the release of Swift 3, we can expect changes that reduce the awkwardness of the language's link to Objective-C, exuding way more Swifty-ness. The Swift team has introduced new API guidelines with the intention of giving the language its own character. The result is a huge renaming and refactoring effort that flows throughout the language. Swift 3 has undergone a huge facelift in terms of its interaction with Objective-C and C APIs. The Swift team is aiming to make your development experience feel more like Swift and less like directly dumping Objective-C into your code. Swift is its own language and should have its own feel just like any other programming language. Yet prior versions of Swift were heavily influenced by the need to interact...