Book Image

iOS 13 Programming for Beginners - Fourth Edition

By : Ahmad Sahar, Craig Clayton
Book Image

iOS 13 Programming for Beginners - Fourth Edition

By: Ahmad Sahar, Craig Clayton

Overview of this book

iOS 13 comes with features ranging from Dark Mode and Catalyst through to SwiftUI and Sign In with Apple. If you're a beginner and are looking to experiment and work with these features to create your own apps, then this updated fourth edition gets you off to a strong start. The book offers a comprehensive introduction for programmers who are new to iOS, covering the entire process of learning the Swift language, writing your own apps, and publishing them on the App Store. This edition is updated and revised to cover the new iOS 13 features along with Xcode 11 and Swift 5. The book starts with an introduction to the Swift programming language, and how to accomplish common programming tasks with it. You'll then start building the user interface (UI) of a complete real-world app, using the latest version of Xcode, and also implement the code for views, view controllers, data managers, and other aspects of mobile apps. The book will then help you apply the latest iOS 13 features to existing apps, along with introducing you to SwiftUI, a new way to design UIs. Finally, the book will take you through setting up testers for your app, and what you need to do to publish your app on the App Store. By the end of this book, you'll be well versed with how to write and publish apps, and will be able to apply the skills you've gained to enhance your apps.
Table of Contents (33 chapters)
1
Section 1: Swift
10
Section 2: Design
15
Section 3: Code
26
Section 4: Features

Building Your App Structure in Storyboard

In the previous chapter, you created a new Xcode project and started building the UI for the Let's Eat app. You added a tab bar to your app that allowed the user to select between the Explore and Map screens, added navigation bars to both screens, added custom graphics files to your app, made a custom color for the Launch screen, and added custom icons for the Launch screen and tab bar buttons. The Explore screen is displayed initially when your app is launched, but it is currently blank.

As you saw in the Touring the Let's Eat app section in Chapter 9, Setting Up the Basic Structure, the Explore screen should display a collection view showing a list of cuisines in collection view cells and have a collection view section header containing a LOCATION button. Tapping the LOCATION button should display a Locations screen containing...