As useful as Apple’s The Swift Programming Language book is, it’s focused solely on the language and has nothing at all about the other 90% of iOS development: the various Cocoa Touch APIs and libraries. Luckily, it’s not that hard for a developer with some iOS/Objective-C coding experience to figure out how to call on them in Swift, and a number of them are sharing their knowledge and findings. Here are some of the more interesting Swift finds that I’ve stumbled across online this week.
Tutorial: Conway’s “Game of Life”
If you’re looking for a tutorial that walks you through the process of building a reasonably complete iOS app, MakeGamesWith.Us’s tutorial is for you! You’ll build Conway’s Game of Life using SpriteKit, and get a better understanding of how to call various Cocoa Touch APIs in Swift.
Brian Advent’s video tutorials
If you’ve gone through Apple’s The Swift Programming Language book and are feeling confident about the language itself but less so about calling the various iOS APIs, you’ll find Brian Advent’s video tutorials helpful.
Simple UI in Swift
Want to get started writing full iOS apps in Swift rather than just coding up language-features-only stuff from the book? Start here.
Swift and UIKit
This goes over Swift and some of the UI features we’ve come to know and love — text fields, alert views, and table views — as well as using Swift delegates and closures.
Blurring with UIVisualEffect and Preview in Interface Builder
UIVisualEffect
is a new class in iOS 8; this tutorial shows you how to use it to get a blur visual effect. This video also shows you how to use the Preview feature in IB.
iOS 8 notification
iOS 8 lets you add custom actions to your notifications, whether on the lock screen, the Home screen, or the Notification Center. This tutorial shows you how to code them.
Swift projects on Github
Swift-2048
Austin Zheng posted iOS-2048, his rendition of the game 2048 in Objective-C a few months back, and he’s since made a Swift version, Swift-2048. It’s not complete, but the basic game works, and it should give you a good starting point for your own non-SpriteKit game projects.
Swift Weather
Swift Weather uses not just an Apple API — Core Location — but also the third-party AFNetworking framework by way of CocoaPods. Be sure to follow the “How to Build” section of the readme.
One reply on “Swift roundup: Interesting sample code and tutorials I’ve found this week”
We’ve starter a twitter account for Swift tips, tricks and recipes called SwiftOverflow. https://twitter.com/swiftoverflow