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iOS 13 Programming for Beginners

You're reading from   iOS 13 Programming for Beginners Get started with building iOS apps with Swift 5 and Xcode 11

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838821906
Length 822 pages
Edition 4th Edition
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Authors (2):
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Craig Clayton Craig Clayton
Author Profile Icon Craig Clayton
Craig Clayton
Ahmad Sahar Ahmad Sahar
Author Profile Icon Ahmad Sahar
Ahmad Sahar
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Table of Contents (33) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Swift
2. Getting Familiar with Xcode FREE CHAPTER 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. Section 2: Design
11. Setting Up the Basic Structure 12. Building Your App Structure in Storyboard 13. Finishing Up Your App Structure in Storyboard 14. Modifying and Configuring Cells 15. Section 3: Code
16. Getting Started with MVC and Collection Views 17. Getting Data into Collection Views 18. Getting Started with Table Views 19. Getting Started with MapKit 20. Getting Started with JSON Files 21. Displaying Data in a Static Table View 22. Getting Started with Custom UIControls 23. Getting Started with Cameras and Photo Libraries 24. Understanding Core Data 25. Saving and Loading from Core Data 26. Section 4: Features
27. Getting Started with Dark Mode 28. Getting Started with Mac Catalyst 29. Getting Started with SwiftUI 30. Getting Started with Sign In with Apple 31. Testing and Submitting Your App to the App Store 32. Other Books You May Enjoy

Using UIKit and SwiftUI Views together

At this point, you have learned how to create text views and image views for your app. Now let's see how to add a view that displays a map. When using storyboards, all you needed to do was to drag in a map view from the Object library to a view in storyboard. SwiftUI does not have a native map view but you can use the same map view that you used in storyboard to render the map. In fact, you can use any view subclass within SwiftUI by wrapping them in a SwiftUI view that conforms to the UIViewRepresentable protocol. You'll create a new custom view that can present a map view now. Do the following steps:

  1. Choose File | New | File to open the template selector.
  2. iOS should already be selected. In the User Interface section, click to select SwiftUI View and click Next.
  3. Name the new file MapView.swift and click Create.
  4. In MapView.swift...
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