Book Image

Mastering iOS 12 Programming - Third Edition

By : Donny Wals
Book Image

Mastering iOS 12 Programming - Third Edition

By: Donny Wals

Overview of this book

The iOS development environment has significantly matured, and with Apple users spending more money in the App Store, there are plenty of development opportunities for professional iOS developers. However, the journey to mastering iOS development and the new features of iOS 12 is not straightforward. This book will help you make that transition smoothly and easily. With the help of Swift 4.2, you’ll not only learn how to program for iOS 12, but also how to write efficient, readable, and maintainable Swift code that maintains industry best practices. Mastering iOS 12 Programming will help you build real-world applications and reflect the real-world development flow. You will also find a mix of thorough background information and practical examples, teaching you how to start implementing your newly gained knowledge. By the end of this book, you will have got to grips with building iOS applications that harness advanced techniques and make best use of the latest and greatest features available in iOS 12.
Table of Contents (35 chapters)
Title Page
Copyright and Credits
Dedication
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
Index

Summary


In this chapter, you learned about HealthKit. You learned what it is, how to ask the user for permissions, and how you can read and write data in the HealthKit store. This chapter put a lot of focus on using HealthKit to track a user's activity, but HealthKit is capable of tracking much more data. You can build apps that help users track just about anything related to their health.

When you build an app that accesses a user's health data, make sure that you don't request access to information that you don't need. It's usually better to ask the user for permission to access certain data just before you need it than to ask for all permissions at once. For instance, you might build an app that tracks both sleep and blood sugar, but not necessarily at the same time. You might want to ask permission to access each of these data types separately, so the user fully understands why you need access to their data.

In addition to learning how you read and write HealthKit data, you implemented...