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You are here: Home / Swift Developments / Issue 162 – December 4th 2018

Issue 162 – December 4th 2018

posted on 4th December 2018

Swift Developments Newsletter

Swift Developments is a hand-curated newsletter containing a weekly selection of the best links, videos, tools and tutorials for people interested in designing and developing their own apps using Swift.


News

Introducing Apple Entrepreneur Camp

Women and minorities continue to face unique challenges when trying to make their way in the traditionally white, male-dominated tech industry. It is therefore wonderful to see Apple launching a new initiative – Apple Entrepreneur Camp – a series of two-week technology labs providing one-to-one access to Apple experts and engineers and ongoing support for organisations founded and led by women. Long may this continue.

apple.com

Business

How to Game The App Store

A thoughtful and well written and well-researched piece from @drbarnard on the state of the App Store, Apple’s responsibilities in shaping it as an ecosystem and some of the techniques that developers are using to ‘game’ it from bending the rules to out-right scams.

davidbarnard.com

How To Launch Your App Successfully With A Social Media Campaign

Looking to launch your app with a bang? Social media can be a great way to reach potential users and built a strong brand identity but launching your app on social media can also be difficult to get right. Emily Clark guides you through the steps to build a strong social media campaign from planning and research to content creation and launch.

learnappmaking.com

Design

Linking to Subscription Management Settings

In recent years, Apple have been increasingly pushing subscriptions as the primary business model for apps within the store but many users remain reluctant to start auto-renewing subscriptions as they find them difficult to manage. @jcieplinski shows you how to reduce this barrier to entry by including links to a users subscription management settings directly within your app.

joecieplinski.com

How to Design Offline-first Approach in a Mobile App

Although internet connectivity is becoming increasingly pervasive, one critical part of your design activities should be thinking about *all* app states – including those where no network connectivity is available. In this article, Gabriel Samojło outlines some thinks to think about and illustrates how taking ‘offline-first’ approach can provide a number of benefits for your overall app design.

netguru.co

Swift

How to use @dynamicCallable in Swift

Recently introduced in Swift 4.2 @dynamicMemberLookup has made it signficantly easier to write Swift code that works alongside more dynamic languages such as Python and JavaScript. Swift 5 will see some further syntactic sugar added to the languages with the addition of @dynamicCallable which will add the ability to mark a type as being directly callable. @twostraws has written a nice introduction.

hackingwithswift.com

Code

Restoring Your UI With State Restoration

As humans, we have a psychological model of how things work which includes objects, without any further influences, remaining in the same state as we left them. However, generally the apps we develop don’t behave in this way. When an app is killed, either by the user or in order to reclaim system resources, the next time we start the app – the apps states starts over. As developers, there is a way we can change this behaviour though, through the use of state restoration, the subject of the latest article from @dagostin.

agostini.tech

Building an Interactive Voice App Using Custom Siri Shortcuts in iOS 12

Introduced in iOS 12, Siri Shortcuts allow us to expose short cuts for activities users commonly use within our apps and allows users to invoke those shortcuts via custom voice commands in Siri. In this tutorial, @alfianlosari shows you how to build these features into your own apps by way of a demo app to perform voice-triggered searches for upcoming movies.

medium.com

Testing

Unit Testing View Controller Memory Leaks

As I’ve been hunting down a couple of memory leaks this week (?) this one was particuarly relevant for me. @igorkulman provides an introduction to using SpecLeaks to write unit tests that detect memory leaks in Swift. Time for me to write some more tests I think.

kulman.sk

Tools

simctl

Along with the Xcode simulator, the simctl tool is a commale line tool that lets you automate and and configure the Xcode simulator programmatically and can be particularly useful when used on conjunction with some sort of continuous integration system. @mattt has been looking at some of it’s capabilities in this weeks issue of NSHipster.

nshipster.com

All You Need Is Tools

@pepibumur outlines the case for business consciously investing in their development tooling outlining why it’s important, some of the benefits it can bring as well as some bad practices he’s seen when companies develop their own tools. Good one to have in your back pocket for the next time you’re trying to persuade someone to invest time and money into improving your tooling.

ppinera.es

Filed Under: Swift Developments Tagged With: SwiftDevelopments

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