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Swift Cookbook

You're reading from   Swift Cookbook Over 60 proven recipes for developing better iOS applications with Swift 5.3

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781839211195
Length 500 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
Tools
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Authors (3):
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Chris Barker Chris Barker
Author Profile Icon Chris Barker
Chris Barker
Keith D. Moon Keith D. Moon
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Keith D. Moon
Keith Moon Keith Moon
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Keith Moon
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Toc

Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Swift Building Blocks 2. Mastering the Building Blocks FREE CHAPTER 3. Data Wrangling with Swift Control Flow 4. Generics, Operators, and Nested Types 5. Beyond the Standard Library 6. Building iOS Apps with Swift 7. Swift Playgrounds 8. Server-Side Swift 9. Performance and Responsiveness in Swift 10. SwiftUI and Combine Framework 11. Using CoreML and Vision in Swift 12. About Packt 13. Other Books You May Enjoy

Passing around functionality with closures

Closures are also referred to as anonymous functions, and this is the best way to explain them. Closures are functions without a name and, like other functions, they can take a set of input parameters and can return an output. Closures behave like other primary types. They can be assigned, stored, passed around, and used as input and output to functions and other closures.

In this recipe, we will explore how and when to use closures in our code.

Getting ready

We will continue to build on our contacts app example from earlier in this chapter, so you should use the same playground as in the previous recipes.

If, however, you are implementing this in a new playground, first add the relevant code from the previous recipes:

struct PersonName { 
let givenName: String
let middleName: String
var familyName: String

func fullName() -> String {
return "\(givenName) \(middleName) \(familyName)"
}

mutating...
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