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Hands-On Design Patterns with Swift

You're reading from   Hands-On Design Patterns with Swift Master Swift best practices to build modular applications for mobile, desktop, and server platforms

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789135565
Length 414 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (3):
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Giordano Scalzo Giordano Scalzo
Author Profile Icon Giordano Scalzo
Giordano Scalzo
Florent Vilmart Florent Vilmart
Author Profile Icon Florent Vilmart
Florent Vilmart
Sergio De Simone Sergio De Simone
Author Profile Icon Sergio De Simone
Sergio De Simone
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Toc

Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Refreshing the Basics FREE CHAPTER 2. Understanding ARC and Memory Management 3. Diving into Foundation and the Standard Library 4. Working with Objective-C in a Mixed Code Base 5. Creational Patterns 6. Structural Patterns 7. Behavioral Patterns 8. Swift-Oriented Patterns 9. Using the Model-View-Controller Pattern 10. Model-View-ViewModel in Swift 11. Implementing Dependency Injection 12. Futures, Promises, and Reactive Programming 13. Modularize Your Apps with Swift Package Manager 14. Testing Your Code with Unit and UI Tests 15. Going Out in the Open (Source) 16. Other Books You May Enjoy

Unit testing using XCTest

The traditional way of testing software encompasses a long phase of manual testing at the end of the software development cycle. This approach has been proven ineffective because manual testing is a long and non-scalable process, and also because the more efficient way is to have short release cycles—two or three weeks—and have a part of the iteration dedicated to the manual testing which, simply isn't affordable. Also, as developers, we realized that the best way of making our code testable is to write simple, granular, and automatic tests while we are still in development. This method, called Test-Driven Development (TDD), was made famous by Kent Beck in his work on Extreme Programming, a revolutionary software programming methodology, revolutionary for its time.

It's based on writing the tests before writing the production...

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