(by @andrestaltz)
If you prefer to watch video tutorials with live-coding, then check out this series I recorded with the same contents as in this article: Egghead.io - Introduction to Reactive Programming.
# | |
# If all files excluded and you will include only specific sub-directories | |
# the parent path must matched before. | |
# | |
/** | |
!/.gitignore | |
############################### | |
# Un-ignore the affected subdirectory |
(by @andrestaltz)
If you prefer to watch video tutorials with live-coding, then check out this series I recorded with the same contents as in this article: Egghead.io - Introduction to Reactive Programming.
(Source: https://lists.swift.org/pipermail/swift-evolution/Week-of-Mon-20160229/011666.html)
The “Complete Generics” goal for Swift 3 has been fairly ill-defined thus fair, with just this short blurb in the list of goals:
Complete generics: Generics are used pervasively in a number of Swift libraries, especially the standard library. However, there are a number of generics features the standard library requires to fully realize its vision, including recursive protocol constraints, the ability to make a constrained extension conform to a new protocol (i.e., an array of Equatable elements is Equatable), and so on. Swift 3.0 should provide those generics features needed by the standard library, because they affect the standard library's ABI.
This message expands upon the notion of “completing generics”. It is not a plan for Swift 3, nor an official core team communication, but it collects the results of numerous discussions among the core team and Swift developers, both of the compiler an
Following the tradition from last year, here's my complete list of all interesting features and updates I could find in Apple's OSes, SDKs and developer tools that were announced at this year's WWDC. This is based on the keynotes, the "What's New In ..." presentations and some others, Apple's release notes, and blog posts and tweets that I came across in the last few weeks.
If for some reason you haven't watched the talks yet, I really recommend watching at least the "State of the Union" and the "What's New In" intros for the platforms you're interested in. The unofficial WWDC Mac app is great way to download the videos and keep track of what you've already watched.
If you're interested, here are my WWDC 2015 notes (might be useful if you're planning to drop support for iOS 8 now and start using some iOS 9 APIs).
This is a curated list of iOS (Swift & ObjC) frameworks which are inspired by React and Elm.
// | |
// Combine+WithLatestFrom.swift | |
// | |
// Created by Shai Mishali on 29/08/2019. | |
// Copyright © 2019 Shai Mishali. All rights reserved. | |
// | |
import Combine | |
// MARK: - Operator methods |
If you work on a Swift project that follows the Model-View-ViewModel (MVVM) architecture or similar, you may want to jump to counterpart in Xcode from your view to your model, and then to your view model. (ie. by using Ctrl+Cmd+Up and Ctrl+Cmd+Down).
You can do this in recent versions of Xcode by setting a configuration default.
From a terminal, just type this command and press Enter:
defaults write com.apple.dt.Xcode IDEAdditionalCounterpartSuffixes -array-add "ViewModel" "View"