Book Image

iOS 16 Programming for Beginners - Seventh Edition

By : Ahmad Sahar, Craig Clayton
Book Image

iOS 16 Programming for Beginners - Seventh Edition

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, which means that competent iOS developers are in high demand. iOS 16 Programming for Beginners, Seventh Edition, is a comprehensive introduction for those who are new to iOS, covering the entire process of learning the Swift language, writing your own app, and publishing it on the App Store. This book follows a hands-on approach. With step-by-step tutorials to real-life examples and easy-to-understand explanations of complicated topics, each chapter will help you learn and practice the Swift language to build your apps and introduce exciting new technologies to incorporate into your apps. You'll learn how to publish iOS apps and work with new iOS 16 features such as Mac Catalyst, SwiftUI, Lock Screen widgets, WeatherKit, 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 (34 chapters)
1
Part I: Swift
11
Part II: Design
16
Part III: Code
26
Part IV: Features
32
Other Books You May Enjoy
33
Index

Understanding table views

The Let’s Eat app uses a table view in the Locations screen to display a list of restaurant locations. A table view presents table view cells using rows arranged in a single column.

To learn more about table views, visit https://developer.apple.com/documentation/uikit/uitableview.

The data displayed by a table view is normally provided by a view controller. A view controller providing data for a table view must conform to the UITableViewDataSource protocol. This protocol declares a list of methods that tells the table view how many cells to display and what to display in each cell.

To learn more about the UITableViewDataSource protocol, visit https://developer.apple.com/documentation/uikit/uitableviewdatasource.

To provide user interaction, a view controller for a table view must also conform to the UITableViewDelegate protocol, which declares a list of methods which are triggered...