出版时间:2015.12
官网链接:leanpub
下载地址:百度网盘(PDF)
内容简介:
Skip the hundreds of pages that barely get into how to make a network call in iOS. No esoteric details about Core Anything or mathematical proofs of flatmap. Only the nitty gritty that you need to get real work done now: interfacing with your web services and displaying the results in your UI.
This book was written using Swift 2.0, Alamofire 3.1, Xcode 7, and iOS 9.
All code samples included.
After reading this book you’ll be able to:
- Analyze a JSON response from a web service call and write Swift code to parse it into model objects.
- Display those model objects in a table view so that when the user launches the app they have a nice list to scroll through.
- Add authentication to use web service calls that require OAuth 2.0, a username/password, or a token.
- Transition from the main table view to a detail view for each object, possibly making another web service call to get more info about the object.
- Let users of your app add, modify and delete objects (as long as your web service supports it).
- Hook in to more web service calls to extend you app, like adding user profiles or letting users submit comments or attach photos to objects.
This book is for:
- Software developers getting started with iOS but experienced in other languages
- Front-end devs looking to implement native UIs for iOS apps (no CSS, oh noes!)
- Back-end devs tasked with getting the data into the user’s hands on iOS
- Android, Windows Phone, Blackberry, Tizen, Symbian & Palm OS devs looking to expand their web service backed apps to iOS
- Anyone whose boss is standing over their shoulder asking why the data isn’t showing up in the tableview yet
This book isn’t for:
- People completely new to programming, you should have a decent grasp of at least one object-oriented programming language or have completed several intro to iOS tutorials
- Designers, managers, UX pros, … It’s a programming book. All the monospace font inserts will probably drive you crazy.
- Cross-platform developers dedicated to their tools (including HTML5 & Xamarin), this is all Swift & native UI, all the time
- Programmers building apps with no webservice interaction
- Game devs