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iOS 9 Game development Essentials

You're reading from   iOS 9 Game development Essentials Design, build, and publish an iOS game from scratch using the stunning features of iOS 9

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781784391430
Length 224 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Chuck Gaffney Chuck Gaffney
Author Profile Icon Chuck Gaffney
Chuck Gaffney
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Toc

Table of Contents (10) Chapters Close

Preface 1. The Swift Programming Language 2. Structuring and Planning a Game Using iOS 9 Storyboards and Segues FREE CHAPTER 3. SpriteKit and 2D Game Design 4. SceneKit and 3D Game Design 5. GameplayKit 6. Exhibit the Metal in Your Game 7. Publishing Our iOS Game 8. The Future of iOS Game Development Index

Objective-C and Swift comparison

Here's a quick review of our Swift code with a comparison to the Objective-C equivalent.

Objective-C

Here's a sample code in Objective-C:

const int MAX_ENEMIES = 10;  //constant
float playerPower = 1.3;     //variable

//Array of NSStrings
NSArray * stageNames = @[@"Downtown Tokyo", @"Heaven Valley", @" Nether"];

//Set of various NSObjects
NSSet *items = [NSSet setWithObjects: Weapons, Armor,
 HealingItems,"A", nil];

//Dictionary with an Int:String key:value
NSDictionary *inventory = [NSDictionary dictionaryWithObjectsAndKeys:
             [NSNumber numberWithInt:1], @"Buster Sword",
             [NSNumber numberWithInt:43], @"Potion",
             [NSNumber numberWithInt:22], @"Strength",
nil];

Swift

Here's the equivalent code in Swift:

let MAX_ENEMIES = 10          //constant
var playerPower = 1.3         //variable

//Array of Strings
let stageNames : [String] = ["Downtown Tokyo","Heaven Valley","Nether"]    

//Set of various NSObjects
var items = Set([Weapons, Armor, HealingItems,"A"])
          
//Dictionary with an Int:String key:value
var playerInventory: [Int : String]  =  [1 : "Buster Sword",  43 : "Potion", 22: "StrengthBooster"]

In the preceding code, we used some examples of variables, constants, arrays, sets, and dictionaries. First, we see their Objective-C syntax and then the equivalent declarations using Swift's syntax. From this example, we can see how compact Swift is compared with Objective-C.

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