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Test-Driven iOS Development with Swift

You're reading from   Test-Driven iOS Development with Swift Write maintainable, flexible, and extensible code using the power of TDD with Swift 5.5

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803232485
Length 280 pages
Edition 4th Edition
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Author (1):
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Dr. Dominik Hauser Dr. Dominik Hauser
Author Profile Icon Dr. Dominik Hauser
Dr. Dominik Hauser
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Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1 –The Basics of Test-Driven iOS Development
2. Chapter 1: Your First Unit Tests FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Understanding Test-Driven Development 4. Chapter 3: Test-Driven Development in Xcode 5. Section 2 –The Data Model
6. Chapter 4: The App We Are Going to Build 7. Chapter 5: Building a Structure for ToDo Items 8. Chapter 6: Testing, Loading, and Saving Data 9. Section 3 –Views and View Controllers
10. Chapter 7: Building a Table View Controller for the To-Do Items 11. Chapter 8: Building a Simple Detail View 12. Chapter 9: Test-Driven Input View in SwiftUI 13. Section 4 –Networking and Navigation
14. Chapter 10: Testing Networking Code 15. Chapter 11: Easy Navigation with Coordinators 16. Other Books You May Enjoy

Chapter 11: Easy Navigation with Coordinators

An iOS app is usually a collection of single screens somehow connected to each other. Inexperienced developers often present a view controller from another view controller, because this is easy to implement and it is often shown that way in tutorials and demo code. But, for apps that need to be maintained over a long period of time, we need a pattern that is easier to understand and easier to change.

The coordinator pattern is very easy to implement and still manages to decouple the navigation between views of the app from the presentation of the information. In the coordinator pattern, a structure called a coordinator is responsible for navigating between views. View controllers tell the coordinator that the user interacted with the app and the coordinator decides which view controller should become responsible for the screen next.

As a bonus, the coordinator pattern makes testing navigation code simpler and more robust, and as a...

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