Book Image

Swift Protocol-Oriented Programming - Fourth Edition

By : Jon Hoffman
Book Image

Swift Protocol-Oriented Programming - Fourth Edition

By: Jon Hoffman

Overview of this book

Protocol-oriented programming is an incredibly powerful concept at the heart of Swift's design. Swift's standard library was developed using POP techniques, generics, and first-class value semantics; therefore, it is important for every Swift developer to understand these core concepts and take advantage of them. The fourth edition of this book is improved and updated to the latest version of the Swift programming language. This book will help you understand what protocol-oriented programming is all about and how it is different from other programming paradigms such as object-oriented programming. This book covers topics such as generics, Copy-On-Write, extensions, and of course protocols. It also demonstrates how to use protocol-oriented programming techniques via real-world use cases. By the end of this book, you will know how to use protocol-oriented programming techniques to build powerful and practical applications.
Table of Contents (11 chapters)

Weak references

A weak reference is similar to an unowned reference, where a non-strong (or weak) reference is referencing an instance of a type. The main difference is a weak reference can contain nil. If the instance is deallocated while there is a weak reference referencing it, then the weak reference is set to nil.

Once again, we begin by creating two new classes:

class MyClass1_Weak {
var name = ""
var class2: MyClass2_Weak?
init(name: String) {
self.name = name
print("Initializing class1_Weak with name \(self.name)")
}
deinit {
print("Releasing class1_Weak with name \(self.name)")
}
}
class MyClass2_Weak {
var name = ""
weak var class1: MyClass1_Weak?
init(name: String) {
self.name = name
print("Initializing class2_Weak with name \(self.name)")
}
deinit...