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SwiftUI Cookbook

You're reading from   SwiftUI Cookbook A guide to solving the most common problems and learning best practices while building SwiftUI apps

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803234458
Length 616 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Authors (2):
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Giordano Scalzo Giordano Scalzo
Author Profile Icon Giordano Scalzo
Giordano Scalzo
Edgar Nzokwe Edgar Nzokwe
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Edgar Nzokwe
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Toc

Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Chapter 1: Using the Basic SwiftUI Views and Controls 2. Chapter 2: Going Beyond the Single Component with Lists and Scroll Views FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 3: Exploring Advanced Components 4. Chapter 4: Viewing while Building with SwiftUI Preview 5. Chapter 5: Creating New Components and Grouping Views with Container Views 6. Chapter 6: Presenting Extra Information to the User 7. Chapter 7: Drawing with SwiftUI 8. Chapter 8: Animating with SwiftUI 9. Chapter 9: Driving SwiftUI with Data 10. Chapter 10: Driving SwiftUI with Combine 11. Chapter 11: SwiftUI Concurrency with async await 12. Chapter 12: Handling Authentication and Firebase with SwiftUI 13. Chapter 13: Handling Core Data in SwiftUI 14. Chapter 14: Creating Cross-Platform Apps with SwiftUI 15. Chapter 15: SwiftUI Tips and Tricks 16. Other Books You May Enjoy

Implementing a CoreLocation wrapper as @ObservedObject

We mentioned in the introduction to this chapter that @State is used when the state variable has value-type semantics. This is because any mutation of the property creates a new copy of the variable, which triggers a rendering of the view's body, but what about a property with reference semantics?

In this case, any mutation of the variable is applied to the variable itself and SwiftUI cannot detect the variation by itself.

In this case, we must use a different property wrapper, @ObservedObject, and the observed object must conform to ObservableObject. Furthermore, the properties of this object that will be observed in the view must be decorated with @Published. In this way, when the properties mutate, the view is notified, and the body is rendered again.

This will also help if we want to bridge iOS foundation objects to the new SwiftUI model, such as CoreLocation functionalities. CoreLocation is the iOS framework...

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