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Mastering Swift

You're reading from   Mastering Swift

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2015
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781784392154
Length 358 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Jon Hoffman Jon Hoffman
Author Profile Icon Jon Hoffman
Jon Hoffman
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Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Taking the First Steps with Swift FREE CHAPTER 2. Learning about Variables, Constants, Strings, and Operators 3. Using Collections and Cocoa Data Types 4. Control Flow and Functions 5. Classes and Structures 6. Working with XML and JSON Data 7. Custom Subscripting 8. Using Optional Type and Optional Chaining 9. Working with Generics 10. Working with Closures 11. Using Mix and Match 12. Concurrency and Parallelism in Swift 13. Swift Formatting and Style Guide 14. Network Development with Swift 15. Adopting Design Patterns in Swift Index

Introducing closures


Closures are self-contained blocks of code that can be passed around and used throughout your application code. We can think of an int type as a type that stores an integer and a string type as a type that stores a string. In that context, a closure can be thought of as a type that holds a block of code. What this means is that we can assign closures to a variable, pass them as arguments to functions, and also return functions from them.

Closures have the ability to capture and store references to any variable or constant from the context in which they were defined. This is known as closing over the variables or constants, and the best thing is, for the most part, Swift will handle the memory management for us. The only exception is when we create a strong reference cycle and we will look at how to resolve this in the Strong reference cycles with closures section of this chapter.

Closures in Swift are similar to blocks in Objective-C; however, closures in Swift are a lot...

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