Book Image

SwiftUI Cookbook - Third Edition

By : Juan C. Catalan
5 (1)
Book Image

SwiftUI Cookbook - Third Edition

5 (1)
By: Juan C. Catalan

Overview of this book

SwiftUI is the modern way to build user interfaces for iOS, macOS, and watchOS. It provides a declarative and intuitive way to create beautiful and interactive user interfaces. The new edition of this comprehensive cookbook includes a fully updated repository for SwiftUI 5, iOS 17, Xcode 15, and Swift 5.9. With this arsenal, it teaches you everything you need to know to build beautiful and interactive user interfaces with SwiftUI 5, from the basics to advanced topics like custom modifiers, animations, and state management. In this new edition, you will dive into the world of creating powerful data visualizations with a new chapter on Swift Charts and how to seamlessly integrate charts into your SwiftUI apps. Further, you will be able to unleash your creativity with advanced controls, including multi-column tables and two-dimensional layouts. You can explore new modifiers for text, images, and shapes that give you more control over the appearance of your views. You will learn how to develop apps for multiple platforms, including iOS, macOS, watchOS, and more. With expert insights, real-world examples, and a recipe-based approach, you’ll be equipped to build remarkable SwiftUI apps that stand out in today’s competitive market.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
18
Other Books You May Enjoy
19
Index

Multi-column navigation with NavigationSplitView

NavigationSplitView is a container view that presents views in two or three columns; selections in leading columns control the presentations in subsequent columns. It was introduced with iOS 16 along with NavigationStack and the new NavigationLink functions. The mail app on the iPad is an example of a three-column layout you may be familiar with.

Getting ready

  1. Our starting point will be the app from the “Typed data-driven navigation with NavigationStack” recipe. Either duplicate the folder of the app you created in that recipe, or download the complete code for that recipe from the GitHub repository.

How to do it…

  1. To show the power of NavigationSplitView, we will modify the layout of the app to use a three-column layout for a regular horizontal size class environment, like in the iPad, and fall back to a traditional navigation stack layout for a compact horizontal size class environment, like in the iPhone. The...