Book Image

SwiftUI Essentials – iOS 14 Edition

By : Neil Smyth
Book Image

SwiftUI Essentials – iOS 14 Edition

By: Neil Smyth

Overview of this book

Do you want to create iOS apps with SwiftUI, Xcode 12, and Swift 5.3, and want to publish it on the app store? This book helps you achieve these skills with a step-by-step approach. This course first walks you through the steps necessary to set up an iOS development environment together and introduces Swift Playgrounds to learn and experiment with Swift—specifically, the Swift 5.3 programming language. After establishing key concepts of SwiftUI and project architecture, this course provides a guided tour of Xcode in SwiftUI development mode. The book also covers the creation of custom SwiftUI views and explains how these views are combined to create user interface layouts, including the use of stacks, frames, and forms. One of the more important skills you’ll learn is how to integrate SwiftUI views into existing UIKit-based projects and explain the integration of UIKit code into SwiftUI. Finally, the book explains how to package up a completed app and upload it to the app store for publication. Along the way, the topics covered in the book are put into practice through detailed tutorials, the source code for which is also available for download. By the end of this course, you will be able to build your own apps for iOS 14 using SwiftUI and publish it on the app store. The code files for the book can be found here: https://www.ebookfrenzy.com/retail/swiftui-ios14/
Table of Contents (56 chapters)
56
Index

20.7 Working with Text Styles

In the above example the font used to display text on a view was declared using a built-in text style (in this case the large title style).

iOS provides a way for the user to select a preferred text size which applications are expected to adopt when displaying text. The current text size can be configured on a device via the Settings -> Display & Brightness -> Text Size screen which provides a slider to adjust the font size as shown below:

Figure 20-2

If a font has been declared on a view using a text style, the text size will dynamically adapt to the user’s preferred font size. Almost without exception, the built-in iOS apps adopt the preferred size setting selected by the user when displaying text and Apple recommends that third-party apps also conform to the user’s chosen text size. The following text style options are currently available:

Large Title

Title, Title2, Title 3

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