Book Image

iOS 15 Programming for Beginners - Sixth Edition

By : Ahmad Sahar, Craig Clayton
5 (1)
Book Image

iOS 15 Programming for Beginners - Sixth Edition

5 (1)
By: Ahmad Sahar, Craig Clayton

Overview of this book

With almost 2 million apps on the App Store, iOS mobile apps continue to be incredibly popular. Anyone can reach millions of customers around the world by publishing their apps on the App Store. iOS 15 Programming for Beginners is a comprehensive introduction for those who are new to iOS. It covers the entire process of learning the Swift language, writing your own app, and publishing it on the App Store. Complete with hands-on tutorials, projects, and self-assessment questions, this easy-to-follow guide will help you get well-versed with the Swift language to build your apps and introduce exciting new technologies that you can incorporate into your apps. You'll learn how to publish iOS apps and work with Mac Catalyst, SharePlay, SwiftUI, Swift concurrency, and much more. By the end of this iOS development book, you'll have the knowledge and skills to write and publish interesting apps, and more importantly, to use the online resources available to enhance your app development journey.
Table of Contents (32 chapters)
1
Part 1: Swift
10
Part 2: Design
15
Part 3: Code
25
Part 4: Features

Summary

In this chapter, you added a collection view to the Explore screen in the Main storyboard file and added a new file, ExploreViewController, which contains the implementation of the ExploreViewController class. You made the ExploreViewController class the view controller for the scene containing the collection view. Then, you modified the ExploreViewController class to have an outlet for the collection view in the storyboard, and made it the data source and delegate for the collection view. You added a collection view section header to the collection view and set the size for the collection view cells and collection view section header. Finally, you added a button to display a second view and configured a Cancel button to dismiss it.

At this point, you should be fairly proficient in using Interface Builder to add views and view controllers to a storyboard scene, link view controller outlets to UI elements in storyboards, set up collection view cells and section headers, and...