Book Image

iOS 10 Programming for Beginners

By : Craig Clayton
Book Image

iOS 10 Programming for Beginners

By: Craig Clayton

Overview of this book

You want to build iOS applications for iPhone and iPad—but where do you start? Forget sifting through tutorials and blog posts, this is a direct route into iOS development, taking you through the basics and showing you how to put the principles into practice. With every update, iOS has become more and more developer-friendly, so take advantage of it and begin building applications that might just take the App Store by storm! Whether you’re an experienced programmer or a complete novice, this book guides you through every facet of iOS development. From Xcode and Swift—the building blocks of modern Apple development—and Playgrounds for beginners, one of the most popular features of the iOS development experience, you’ll quickly gain a solid foundation to begin venturing deeper into your development journey. For the experienced programmer, jump right in and learn the latest iOS 10 features. You’ll also learn the core elements of iOS design, from tables to tab bars, as well as more advanced topics such as gestures and animations that can give your app the edge. Find out how to manage databases, as well as integrating standard elements such as photos, GPS into your app. With further guidance on beta testing with TestFlight, you’ll quickly learn everything you need to get your project on the App Store!
Table of Contents (26 chapters)
iOS 10 Programming for Beginners
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface
Free Chapter
1
Getting Familiar with Xcode
Index

Design clean up


In the last chapter, we left off with both our Label and our down arrow inside of our Stack View. Let's run the project and see what we have so far by hitting the Play button (or use cmd + R). If we compare what we have with what the final design should look like (shown in the App Tour in Chapter 5, Starting the UI Setup), we can see it is not the same:

Therefore, we need to fix our custom title view.

Adding a Clear Background to the Custom Title View

Our first update will be to change the custom title view's background from white to clear. Then, we need to correct the spacing between the Label and the arrow. Finally, we will need to rename the Label. Let's update our background first:

  1. In the Outline view, select View:

  2. In your Utilities panel, make sure you are in the Attributes Inspector and click on the color drop-down menu under Background:

  3. Now, select Clear Color, which will give us a clear background for our view:

Updating the UIStackView

Now that the background color is clear...