Book Image

Learning Swift Second Edition - Second Edition

By : Andrew J Wagner
Book Image

Learning Swift Second Edition - Second Edition

By: Andrew J Wagner

Overview of this book

Swift is Apple’s new programming language and the future of iOS and OS X app development. It is a high-performance language that feels like a modern scripting language. On the surface, Swift is easy to jump into, but it has complex underpinnings that are critical to becoming proficient at turning an idea into reality. This book is an approachable, step-by-step introduction into programming with Swift for everyone. It begins by giving you an overview of the key features through practical examples and progresses to more advanced topics that help differentiate the proficient developers from the mediocre ones. It covers important concepts such as Variables, Optionals, Closures, Generics, and Memory Management. Mixed in with those concepts, it also helps you learn the art of programming such as maintainability, useful design patterns, and resources to further your knowledge. This all culminates in writing a basic iOS app that will get you well on your way to turning your own app ideas into reality.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Learning Swift Second Edition
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Building blocks of functional programming in Swift


The first thing to realize is that Swift is not a functional programming language. At its core, it will always be an object-oriented programming language. However, since functions in Swift are first-class citizens, we can use some of the core techniques. Swift provides some built-in methods to get us started.

Filter

The first method we are going to discuss is called filter. As the name suggests, this method is used to filter elements in a list. For example, we can filter our numbers array to include only even numbers:

var evenNumbers = numbers.filter({ element in
    element % 2 == 0
}) // [2, 4]

The closure we provide to filter will be called once for each element in the array. It is tasked with returning true if the element needs to be included in the result and false otherwise. The preceding closure takes advantage of the implied return value and simply returns true if the number has a remainder of zero when being divided by two.

Note that...