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iOS 10 Programming for Beginners

You're reading from   iOS 10 Programming for Beginners Explore the latest iOS 10 and Swift 3 features

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2016
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781786464507
Length 678 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Tools
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Author (1):
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Craig Clayton Craig Clayton
Author Profile Icon Craig Clayton
Craig Clayton
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Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Familiar with Xcode FREE CHAPTER 2. Building a Foundation with Swift 3. Digging Deeper 4. Digging into Collections 5. Starting the UI Setup 6. Setting Up UI 7. Getting Started with the Grid 8. Getting Started with the List 9. Working More with Lists 10. Where Are We? 11. Where's My Data? 12. Foodie Reviews 13. Saving Reviews 14. Universal 15. iMessages 16. Notifications 17. Just a Peek 18. Beta and Store Submission Index

What is Core Data?

Let's start by taking a quote directly from Apple: Core Data is a framework for managing and persisting an object graph. Apple does not call Core Data a database, even though, behind the scenes, it saves data to a SQLite file. Core Data is very hard to explain to someone new to programming or to someone who has come from a different programming language. However, in iOS 10, Core Data has been greatly simplified. Having a general understanding of what Core Data does and how it works is sufficient for our purposes in this book.

When using the Core Data framework, you should be familiar with the Managed Object Model, the Managed Object Context, and the Persistent Store Coordinator. Let's look at a diagram to get a better understanding of how they interact with each other:

What is Core Data?

NSManagedObjectModel

The Managed Object Model represents the data model of your Core Data application. The Managed Object Model will interact with all of your data models (also known as entities...

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