Book Image

iOS 12 Programming for Beginners - Third Edition

By : Craig Clayton
Book Image

iOS 12 Programming for Beginners - Third Edition

By: Craig Clayton

Overview of this book

Want to build iOS 12 applications from scratch with the latest Swift 4.2 language and Xcode 10 by your side? Forget sifting through tutorials and blog posts; this book is a direct route to iOS development, taking you through the basics and showing you how to put principles into practice. Take advantage of this developer-friendly guide and start building applications that may just take the App Store by storm! If you’re already an experienced programmer, you can jump right in and learn the latest iOS 12 features. For beginners, this book starts by introducing you to iOS development as you learn Xcode and Swift. You'll also study advanced iOS design topics, such as gestures and animations, to give your app the edge. You’ll explore the latest Swift 4.2 and iOS 12 developments by incorporating new features, such as the latest in notifications, custom-UI notifications, maps, and the recent additions in Sirikit. The book will guide you in using TestFlight to quickly get to grips with everything you need to get your project on the App Store. By the end of this book, you'll be ready to start building your own cool iOS applications confidently.
Table of Contents (27 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Getting Familiar with Xcode

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 works. Type inference means that, before your code runs, it quickly checks to ensure that you did not set anything to a different type. If you do, Xcode gives 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 errors is like finding a needle in a haystack. Therefore, type checking helps you write safer code by helping you to avoid errors when working with different types.

We have now looked at data types and know that strings are for textual...