Book Image

Hands-On Design Patterns with Swift

By : Florent Vilmart, Giordano Scalzo, Sergio De Simone
Book Image

Hands-On Design Patterns with Swift

By: Florent Vilmart, Giordano Scalzo, Sergio De Simone

Overview of this book

Swift keeps gaining traction not only amongst Apple developers but also as a server-side language. This book demonstrates how to apply design patterns and best practices in real-life situations, whether that's for new or already existing projects. You’ll begin with a quick refresher on Swift, the compiler, the standard library, and the foundation, followed by the Cocoa design patterns – the ones at the core of many cocoa libraries – to follow up with the creational, structural, and behavioral patterns as defined by the GoF. You'll get acquainted with application architecture, as well as the most popular architectural design patterns, such as MVC and MVVM, and learn to use them in the context of Swift. In addition, you’ll walk through dependency injection and functional reactive programming. Special emphasis will be given to techniques to handle concurrency, including callbacks, futures and promises, and reactive programming. These techniques will help you adopt a test-driven approach to your workflow in order to use Swift Package Manager and integrate the framework into the original code base, along with Unit and UI testing. By the end of the book, you'll be able to build applications that are scalable, faster, and easier to maintain.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
Title Page
Copyright and Credits
About Packt
Contributors
Preface
Index

Summary


In this final chapter, we covered one of the most important aspects of innovation in the software world: sharing your code with the world. While anyone can upload a few lines of Swift to GitHub, publishing a successful project is a particular art form. As of now, you should be able to use Jazzy to generate beautiful HTML documentation of your code. Using GitHub, Travis, or even GitLab to host and iterate on your project is now second nature. For your iOS apps, you are able to refactor complex shell scripts into simple actions with fastlane. Finally, your repository isn't naked with just code, but sports a useful README, a license, and you, as a fresh maintainer, are ready to deal with your first issues, merge and close your first pull requests, and pledge to respect and appreciate your users.

Reflecting on what we covered through this book, we started with the first part of our journey laying out the foundation of knowledge required to tackle design patterns properly. You now have...