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🚀 I just published “Smashing the iOS Interview” — a curated collection of my best interview-style articles on iOS development, Swift, architecture & more! 📖 From Medium to a polished PDF: 🔗 Articles: shorturl.at/inj8h 🛒 Book: shorturl.at/h4Gy7 🙌 #iOSDev #Gumroad
Funny! It reminds me of the Java people starting iOS development and creating all those abstract factories with infinite names …
A year later, I've rediscovered this fantastic blog. I've always believed in the idea that there is a tradeoff between algorithms and data structures, and this balance should favor the data structuring side. Excellent collection of posts from @AlexOzun swiftology.io/collections/ty…
This is great! And wonderfully explained! swiftology.io/articles/types…
swiftology.io
Typestate - the new Design Pattern in Swift 5.9 | Swiftology
In this article I will introduce you to Typestate pattern, popularised by Rust language, now available in Swift 5.9. You will see how the combination of generic constraints and Swift's new memory...
This guys is awesome!
How To Release A Mobile App The mobile app release process differs from conventional methods. This illustration simplifies the journey to help you understand. Typical Stages in a Mobile App Release Process: 1. Registration & Development (iOS & Android): - Enroll in Apple's…
Pop quiz, hotshot. Will the BookView below re-compute its body when the book’s 'readCount' changes? Why or why not? Reply to give us your thoughts. 😆
Thanks ChatGPT. This is an useful alias to quickly switch between the current and the previous branch. I love it so much that I have also created an alias in my zsh for `gitb`.
``` let numbers = [1, 2, 3] let moreNumbers = numbers + [4] ``` It feels a bit wasteful to wrap `4` inside an array just for the code to build, doesn't it? 🤨 But did you know that Swift has a built-in type to solve this exact issue? Let me show you 🍿 youtube.com/watch?v=NtjLXB…
Here's how you can detect an "Interface Segregation Principle" violation in 10 seconds. Let’s get started…
Are you struggling to understand the new Swift Macros explained in #WWDC23? I have spent the past 2 days studying and applying it relentlessly. And what I've found is that it can be easily used by understanding & applying these 3 tips:
Many developers are sharing great tips on Twitter for #wwdc23 I've collected all my favorites. Check them out 👇
Here are my 8 must-watch sessions for today (from WWDC '23). Eager to see SwiftData, StoreKit for SwiftUI, and Swift Macros. Is anything else worth checking out that I might have missed?
Migrating to XCode 15 and successfully building your project is not enough. Running your entire test suite is necessary to gain confidence and ensure everything works correctly. Here is a real-life example in action...
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