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Mastering iOS 14 Programming

You're reading from   Mastering iOS 14 Programming Build professional-grade iOS 14 applications with Swift 5.3 and Xcode 12.4

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838822842
Length 558 pages
Edition 4th Edition
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Authors (3):
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Mario Eguiluz Alebicto Mario Eguiluz Alebicto
Author Profile Icon Mario Eguiluz Alebicto
Mario Eguiluz Alebicto
Chris Barker Chris Barker
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Chris Barker
Donny Wals Donny Wals
Author Profile Icon Donny Wals
Donny Wals
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Table of Contents (22) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Chapter 1: What's New in iOS 14? 2. Chapter 2: Working with Dark Mode FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 3: Using Lists and Tables 4. Chapter 4: Creating a Detail Page 5. Chapter 5: Immersing Your Users with Animation 6. Chapter 6: Understanding the Swift Type System 7. Chapter 7: Flexible Code with Protocols, Generics, and Extensions 8. Chapter 8: Adding Core Data to Your App 9. Chapter 9: Fetching and Displaying Data from the Network 10. Chapter 10: Making Smarter Apps with Core ML 11. Chapter 11: Adding Media to Your App 12. Chapter 12: Improving Apps with Location Services 13. Chapter 13: Working with the Combine Framework 14. Chapter 14: Creating an App Clip for Your App 15. Chapter 15: Recognition with Vision Framework 16. Chapter 16: Creating Your First Widget 17. Chapter 17: Using Augmented Reality 18. Chapter 18: Creating a macOS app with Catalyst 19. Chapter 19: Ensuring App Quality with Tests 20. Chapter 20: Submitting Your App to the App Store 21. Other Books You May Enjoy

Updating Core Data objects with fetched data

So far, the only thing you have stored in Core Data is movie names. You will expand this functionality by performing a lookup for a certain movie name through the movie database API. The fetched information will be used to display and store a popularity rating for the movies in the Core Data database.

A task such as this seems straightforward at first; you could come up with a flow such as the one shown in the following steps:

  1. The user indicates their favorite movie.
  2. The movie's popularity rating is fetched.
  3. The movie and its rating are stored in the database.

The user interface updates with the new movie. At first glance, this is a fine strategy; insert the data when you have it. However, it's important to consider that API calls are typically done asynchronously so the user interface stays responsive. More importantly, API calls can be really slow if your user doesn't have a good internet connection...

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