Book Image

Learn iOS 11 Programming with Swift 4 - Second Edition

By : Craig Clayton
Book Image

Learn iOS 11 Programming with Swift 4 - Second Edition

By: Craig Clayton

Overview of this book

<p>You want to build iOS applications but where do you start? Forget sifting through tutorials and blog posts, this book is a direct route into iOS development, taking you through the basics and showing you how to put the principles into practice. So take advantage of this developer-friendly guide and start building applications that may just take the App Store by storm!</p> <p>Whether you're an experienced programmer or a complete novice, this book guides you through every facet of iOS development. From Xcode and Swift, the building blocks of modern iOS development, you'll quickly gain a solid foundation to begin venturing deeper into your development journey. Experienced programmers can jump right in and learn the latest iOS 11 features.</p> <p>You'll also learn advanced topics of iOS design, such as gestures and animations, to give your app the edge. Explore the latest developments in Swift 4 and iOS 11 by incorporating new features, custom-rich notifications, drag and drop features, and the latest developments in SiriKit. With further guidance on beta testing with TestFlight, you'll quickly learn everything you need to get your project on the App Store!</p>
Table of Contents (36 chapters)
Title Page
Copyright and Credits
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
Free Chapter
1
Getting Familiar with Xcode
Index

Type safety and type inference


Swift is a type-safe language, which means that you are encouraged to be clear about the value types with which your code will work. Type inference means that, before your code runs, it will be able to quickly check to ensure that you did not set anything to a different type. If you do, Xcode will give you an error. Why is this good? Let's say that you have an app in the store and that you set one of your variables as a String in one part of your code, but then accidentally set the same variable as an Int in another part of your code. This error may cause some bad behavior in your app that could cause it to crash. Finding these kinds of error is like finding a needle in a haystack. Therefore, type checking helps you write safer code by helping you avoid errors when working with different types.

We have now looked at data types and know that strings are for textual data, Int for integer, Bool for boolean, and Double and Float for floating-point numbers. Let's...