Exploring the iOS SDK
Wallace Wang

#SwiftUI
#Swift
#iPhone
#iOS
Tame the power of Apple’s new user interface toolkit, SwiftUI. This revised and expanded Seventh Edition covers the basic information you need to get up and running quickly to turn your great ideas into working iOS apps with stunningly interactive interfaces using SwiftUI. New chapters cover expandable text fields, multidate pickers, using gauges, progress views and variable SF symbol icons, creating chats, and using the navigation stack and split view.
You’ll start with basic designs and then explore more sophisticated ones. Assuming little or no working knowledge of the Swift programming language, and written in a friendly, easy-to-follow style, this book offers a comprehensive course in iPhone and iPad programming. The book provides a gentle introduction to using Xcode and then guides you though the creation of your first simple application. You’ll create user interfaces for that application using multiple screens in two different ways―using Navigation View and Tab Bars.
Then integrate all the interface elements iOS users have come to know and love, such as buttons, switches, pickers, toolbars, and sliders with less effort and more efficiency. You’ll also learn about touch gestures, lists, and grids for displaying data on a user interface. And you’ll even go beyond those simple controls to liven up any user interface with simple animation techniques. Spice your designs up with movement, scaling, and resizing, including spring and bounce effects!
Once you’re ready, move on to Pro iPhone Development with Swift UI to learn more of the unique aspects of iOS programming and the Swift language.
You will:
Chapter 1: Understanding iOS Programming
Chapter 2: Designing User Interfaces with SwiftUI
Chapter 3: Placing Views on the User Interface
Chapter 4: Working with Text
Chapter 5: Working with Images
Chapter 6: Responding to the User with Buttons and Segmented Controls
Chapter 7: Retrieving Text from Text Fields and Text Editors
Chapter 8: Limiting Choices with Pickers
Chapter 9: Limiting Choices with Toggles, Steppers, and Sliders
Chapter 10: Providing Options with Links and Menus
Chapter 11: Touch Gestures
Chapter 12: Using Alerts, Action Sheets, and Contextual Menus
Chapter 13: Displaying Lists
Chapter 14: Using Forms and Group Boxes
Chapter 15: Using Disclosure Groups, Scroll Views, and Outline Groups
Chapter 16: Creating Charts
Chapter 17: Using the Navigation Stack
Chapter 18: Using the Tab View
Chapter 19: Using Grids
Chapter 20: Using Animation
Wallace Wang is a former Windows enthusiast who took one look at Vista and realized that the future of computing belonged to the Mac. He's written more than 40 computer books, including Microsoft Office for Dummies, Beginning Programming for Dummies, Steal This Computer Book, My New Mac, and My New iPad. In addition to programming the Mac and iPhone/iPad, he also performs stand-up comedy, having appeared on A&E s "Evening at the Improv," and having performed in Las Vegas at the Riviera Comedy Club at the Riviera Hotel & Casino. When he’s not writing computer books or performing stand-up comedy, he also enjoys blogging about screenwriting at his site, The 15 Minute Movie Method, where he shares screenwriting tips with other aspiring screenwriters who all share the goal of breaking into Hollywood.









