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Mastering iOS 12 Programming

You're reading from   Mastering iOS 12 Programming Build professional-grade iOS applications with Swift and Xcode 10

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789133202
Length 750 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
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Author (1):
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Donny Wals Donny Wals
Author Profile Icon Donny Wals
Donny Wals
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Table of Contents (29) Chapters Close

Preface 1. UITableView Touch-up FREE CHAPTER 2. A Better Layout with UICollectionView 3. Creating a Detail Page 4. Immersing Your Users with Animation 5. Understanding the Swift Type System 6. Writing Flexible Code with Protocols and Generics 7. Improving the Application Structure 8. Adding Core Data to Your App 9. Fetching and Displaying Data from the Network 10. Being Proactive with Background Fetch 11. Syncing Data with CloudKit 12. Using Augmented Reality 13. Improving Apps With Location Services 14. Making Smarter Apps with CoreML 15. Tracking Activity Using HealthKit 16. Streamlining Experiences with Siri 17. Using Media in Your App 18. Implementing Rich Notifications 19. Instant Information with a Today Extension 20. Exchanging Data With Drag And Drop 21. Improved Discoverability with Spotlight and Universal Links 22. Extending iMessage 23. Ensuring App Quality with Tests 24. Discovering Bottlenecks with Instruments 25. Offloading Tasks with Operations and GCD 26. Submitting Your App to the App Store 27. Answers 28. Other Books You May Enjoy

UICollectionView performance

You have probably already noticed that, apart from the ability to add a custom layout, a collection view is very similar to a table view. When you look at what collection view does under the hood to maintain excellent scrolling performance, you will find even more similarities. The collection view is optimized to show as many cells on screen as quickly as it possibly can while keeping its memory footprint as small as possible. These optimizations are important for table views but they are even more important for collection views because a collection view might show a lot more cells on screen at a time than a table view does. The following diagram visualizes this:

The fact that collection views show so many cells at once has made it so that Apple added an extra optimization to it compared to table views. A table view always loads one or two items that...

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