Book Image

Mastering Swift 5.3 - Sixth Edition

By : Jon Hoffman
Book Image

Mastering Swift 5.3 - Sixth Edition

By: Jon Hoffman

Overview of this book

Over the years, Mastering Swift has proven itself among developers as a popular choice for an in-depth and practical guide to the Swift programming language. This sixth edition comes with the latest features, an overall revision to align with Swift 5.3, and two new chapters on building swift from source and advanced operators. From the basics of the language to popular features such as concurrency, generics, and memory management, this in-depth guide will help you develop your expertise and mastery of the language. As you progress, you will gain practical insights into some of the most sophisticated elements in Swift development, including protocol extensions, error handling, and closures. The book will also show you how to use and apply them in your own projects. In later chapters, you will understand how to use the power of protocol-oriented programming to write flexible and easier-to-manage code in Swift. Finally, you will learn how to add the copy-on-write feature to your custom value types, along with understanding how to avoid memory management issues caused by strong reference cycles. By the end of this Swift book, you will have mastered the Swift 5.3 language and developed the skills you need to effectively use its features to build robust applications.
Table of Contents (23 chapters)
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Index

Protocol-oriented design

Just like our object-oriented design, we will start off with a diagram that shows the types needed and the relationships between them. Figure 10.2 shows our protocol-oriented design:

Figure 10.2: Protocol-oriented design

As we can see, the POP design is quite different from the OOP design. In this design, we use three techniques that make POP significantly different from OOP. These techniques are protocol inheritance, protocol composition, and protocol extensions. We looked at protocol extensions in the previous chapter, but we have not covered protocol inheritance or composition yet. It is important to understand these concepts, so before we go into the design, let's look at what protocol inheritance and protocol composition are.

Protocol inheritance

Protocol inheritance is where one protocol can inherit the requirements from one or more additional protocols. This is similar to class inheritance in OOP, but instead of inheriting...