Book Image

Xamarin Cross-platform Application Development

By : Jonathan Peppers
Book Image

Xamarin Cross-platform Application Development

By: Jonathan Peppers

Overview of this book

<p>Developing a mobile application for just one platform is becoming a thing of the past. Companies expect their apps to be supported on both iOS and Android, whilst leveraging the best native features of both. Xamarin’s tools help solve this requirement by giving developers a single toolset to target both platforms.</p> <p>"Xamarin Cross-platform Application Development" is a step-by-step guide for building professional applications for iOS and Android. The book walks you through building a chat application, complete with a backend web service and native features such as GPS location, camera, and push notifications.</p> <p>This book begins with iOS and Android application fundamentals, then moves on to sharing code, and eventually digs deeper into native functionality. By the end of the book, readers will have successfully built a cross-platform application ready for submitting to app stores. You will gain an in-depth knowledge about the concepts of building cross platform applications.</p> <p>"Xamarin Cross-platform Application Development" also covers native iOS and Android APIs, unit testing, building a real web service with Windows Azure, push notifications, interacting with the camera and GPS, leveraging Java and Objective-C libraries, and finally app store submission. Towards the end of the book you will feel confident in developing your own Xamarin applications.</p> <p>"Xamarin Cross-platform Application Development" will teach you everything you need to know to develop an end-to-end, cross-platform solution with Xamarin.</p>
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Xamarin Cross-platform Application Development
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Using segues and UITableView


A segue is a transition from one controller to another. In the same way, a storyboard file is a collection of controllers and their views attached together by segues. This in turn allows you to see the layouts of each controller and the general flow of your application at the same time.

There are just a few categories of segue, which are as follows:

  • Push: This is used within a navigation controller. It pushes a new controller to the top of the navigation controller's stack. Push uses the standard animation on iOS for navigation controllers and is generally the most commonly used segue.

  • Relationship: This is used to set a child controller of another controller. For example, the root controller of a navigation controller, container views, or split view controllers in an iPad application.

  • Modal: On using this, a controller presented modally will appear on top of the parent controller. It will cover the entire screen until dismissed. There are several types of different...