Book Image

Learning Xcode 8

By : Jak Tiano
Book Image

Learning Xcode 8

By: Jak Tiano

Overview of this book

Over the last few years, we’ve seen a breakthrough in mobile computing and the birth of world-changing mobile apps. With a reputation as one of the most user-centric and developer-friendly platforms, iOS is the best place to launch your next great app idea. As the official tool to create iOS applications, Xcode is chock full of features aimed at making a developer’s job easier, faster, and more fun. This book will take you from complete novice to a published app developer, and covers every step in between. You’ll learn the basics of iOS application development by taking a guided tour through the Xcode software and Swift programming language, before putting that knowledge to use by building your first app called “Snippets.” Over the course of the book, you will continue to explore the many facets of iOS development in Xcode by adding new features to your app, integrating gestures and sensors, and even creating an Apple Watch companion app. You’ll also learn how to use the debugging tools, write unit tests, and optimize and distribute your app. By the time you make it to the end of this book, you will have successfully built and published your first iOS application.
Table of Contents (23 chapters)
Learning Xcode 8
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Scroll through snippets


All this time, we've been building out our data model and adding ways to input new information. However, we still can't see any of the snippets we've been making! Now it's time to actually let the user see what they've been saving.

The next story is "I want to scroll through my snippets". The tasks that we need to complete are:

  • Adding a UITableView to our first scene, with two prototype cells for the TextSnippet and the PhotoSnippet

  • Programming the view controller to display the information from our data array in our UITableView

To satisfy our user story, we're going to use a UITableView, which allows us to scroll through cells of data. We're also going to create our own custom cells (called prototype cells) to define a distinct look for both the Text and Photo type cells. Then, we are going to populate the table view with data from our data array.

Create prototype cells

Current task: Add a UITableView to our first scene, with two prototype cells for the TextSnippet...