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iOS 18 Programming for Beginners

You're reading from   iOS 18 Programming for Beginners Learn iOS development with Swift 6, Xcode 16, and iOS 18 - your path to App Store success

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781836204893
Length 584 pages
Edition 9th Edition
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Toc

Table of Contents (34) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Swift FREE CHAPTER
2. Exploring Xcode 3. Simple Values and Types 4. Conditionals and Optionals 5. Range Operators and Loops 6. Collection Types 7. Functions and Closures 8. Classes, Structures, and Enumerations 9. Protocols, Extensions, and Error Handling 10. Swift Concurrency 11. Part 2: Design
12. Setting Up the User Interface 13. Building Your User Interface 14. Finishing Up Your User Interface 15. Modifying App Screens 16. Part 3: Code
17. Getting Started with MVC and Table Views 18. Getting Data into Table Views 19. Passing Data between View Controllers 20. Getting Started with Core Location and MapKit 21. Getting Started with JSON Files 22. Getting Started with Custom Views 23. Getting Started with the Camera and Photo Library 24. Getting Started with Search 25. Getting Started with Collection Views 26. Part 4: Features
27. Getting Started with SwiftData 28. Getting Started with SwiftUI 29. Getting Started with Swift Testing 30. Getting Started with Apple Intelligence 31. Testing and Submitting Your App to the App Store 32. Other Books You May Enjoy
33. Index

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In the previous chapter, you learned how to group instruction sequences together using functions and closures.

It's time to think about how to represent complex objects in your code. For example, think about a car. You could use a String constant to store a car name and a Double variable to store a car price, but they are not associated with one another. You've seen that you can group instructions together to make functions and closures. In this chapter, you'll learn how to group constants and variables together in a single entity using classes and structures, and how to manipulate them. You'll also learn how to use enumerations to group a set of related values together.

By the end of this chapter, you'll have learned how to create and initialize a class, create a subclass from an existing class, create and initialize a structure, differentiate...

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