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Swift High Performance

You're reading from   Swift High Performance Leverage Swift and enhance your code to take your applications to the next level

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2015
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785282201
Length 212 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Kostiantyn Koval Kostiantyn Koval
Author Profile Icon Kostiantyn Koval
Kostiantyn Koval
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Table of Contents (10) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Exploring Swift's Power and Performance FREE CHAPTER 2. Making a Good Application Architecture in Swift 3. Testing and Identifying Slow Code with the Swift Toolkit 4. Improving Code Performance 5. Choosing the Correct Data Structure 6. Architecting Applications for High Performance 7. The Importance of Being Lazy 8. Discovering All the Underlying Swift Power Index

Method calls


Before discussing Swift method calls optimization, it would be very useful to have a look at different types of method call implementation.

There are two main types of method call:

  • Static: Static method binding means that, when you call a method on the object, the compiler knows that you are calling exactly this method on exactly this class. C is an example of a language with static method binding.

  • Dynamic: On other hand, dynamic has a weak binding between the method and the object. When you call a method on the object there is no guarantee that an object can handle this method call. Objective-C has a dynamic method binding. That's why you can see the object does not respond to selector error in Objective-C.

Objective-C is a dynamic-type language and it has a dynamic runtime. Calling a method is called message sending. You send a message to the target.

[dog bark] // dog is a target and bark is a message

This looks like a normal method call, but after compilation it would actually...

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