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

Summary


In this chapter we covered changes to collections and closures. We learned about the new Collection protocol that forms the base of the new collection model and how to adopt the protocol in our own custom collections. The new collection model made a significant change in moving collection traversal from the index to the collection itself. The new collection model changes are necessary in order to support Objective-C interactivity and to provide a mechanism to iterate over the collections items using the collections itself. As for closures, we also explored the motivation for the language moving to non-escaping closures as the default. We also learned how to properly use inout parameters with closures in Swift 3. In the next chapter, we are will cover more type changes and type aliases within protocols and protocol extensions.