Book Image

Swift Cookbook. - Second Edition

By : Keith Moon, Chris Barker
Book Image

Swift Cookbook. - Second Edition

By: Keith Moon, Chris Barker

Overview of this book

Swift is an exciting, multi-platform, general-purpose programming language, and with this book, you'll explore the features of its latest version, Swift 5.3. The book begins with an introduction to the basic building blocks of Swift 5.3, its syntax, and the functionalities of Swift constructs. You’ll then discover how Swift Playgrounds provide an ideal platform to write, execute, and debug your Swift code. As you advance through the chapters, the book will show you how to bundle variables into tuples or sets, order your data with an array, store key-value pairs with dictionaries, and use property observers. You’ll also get to grips with the decision-making and control structures in Swift, examine advanced features such as generics and operators, and explore functionalities outside of the standard library. Once you’ve learned how to build iOS applications using UIKit, you'll find out how to use Swift for server-side programming, run Swift on Linux, and investigate Vapor. Finally, you'll discover some of the newest features of Swift 5.3 using SwiftUI and Combine to build adaptive and reactive applications, and find out how to use Swift to build and integrate machine learning models along with Apple’s Vision Framework. By the end of this Swift book, you'll have discovered solutions to boost your productivity while developing code using Swift 5.3.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)
12
About Packt

Bailing out with fatalError and precondition

It's comforting to think that in the code you write, everything will always happen as expected, and your program can handle any eventuality. However, sometimes things can go wrong – really wrong. A situation could arise that you know is possible but don't expect to ever happen, and the program should terminate if it does. In this recipe, we will look at two issues like this: fatalError and precondition.

Getting ready

Let's reuse our example from the previous recipe; we have an object that can be used to classify movie reviews based on how many stars out of 10 the review gave the movie. However, let's simplify its use, and say that we only intend for a classifier object to classify one, and only one, movie review.

How to do it...

Let's set up our movie classifier to only be used once, and only accept ratings out of 10:

  1. Define the classification state and the movie review class:
enum ClassificationState { 
...