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Learning Swift

You're reading from   Learning Swift Build a solid foundation in Swift to develop smart and robust iOS and OS X applications

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2015
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781784392505
Length 266 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Andrew J Wagner Andrew J Wagner
Author Profile Icon Andrew J Wagner
Andrew J Wagner
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Toc

Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introducing Swift 2. Building Blocks – Variables, Collections, and Flow Control FREE CHAPTER 3. One Piece at a Time – Types, Scopes, and Projects 4. To Be or Not to Be – Optionals 5. A Modern Paradigm – Closures and Functional Programming 6. Make Swift Work for You – Protocols and Generics 7. Everything is Connected – Memory Management 8. Writing Code the Swift Way – Design Patterns and Techniques 9. Harnessing the Past – Understanding and Translating Objective-C 10. A Whole New World – Developing an App 11. What's Next? Resources, Advice, and Next Steps Index

Containers


Objective-C has the same core containers that Swift does with the two exceptions that they are named slightly differently and all the containers in Objective-C are reference types because of the basic requirement that all Objective-C types must be reference types.

Arrays

In Objective-C, arrays are called NSArray. Let's look at the initialization of an array in both Swift and Objective-C side-by-side:

var array = [Int]()

NSArray *array = [NSArray alloc];
array = [array init];

We defined a variable called array that is a reference to the NSArray type. We then assign it to a newly allocated instance of NSArray. The square bracket notation in Objective-C allows us to call methods on a type or on an instance. Each separate call is always contained within a single set of square brackets. In this case, we first call the alloc method on the NSArray class. This returns a newly allocated variable that is of the NSArray type.

In contrast to Swift, Objective-C requires a two-step process to initialize...

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