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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

The differences between variables and constants


Probably, the most often used feature in all programming languages is creating and storing a value. We create local variables in functions and declare them in classes and other data structures; that's why it's very important to do it properly.

In Swift, there are two ways of creating and storing a value, as follows:

  • Making it a variable:

    var name = "Sara"
  • Making it a constant:

    let name = "Sara"

The difference between variables and constants is that a constant value can be assigned only once and can't be changed after that. A variable value, on the other hand, can be changed anytime. Here's an example:

var name = "Sam"
name = "Jon"

let lastName = "Peterson"
lastName = "Jakson" //Error, can't change constant after assigning

Tip

The golden rule is to always declare your type as a constant (the let keyword in the previous example) first. Change it to a variable (the var keyword) only if you need it afterwards.

There are some exceptions when you can't declare...

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