Learn Swift 4 with Bob: The Intermediate to Advanced Swift

Functional Programming, Protocol Oriented, Value Oriented, Generic Protocols, Object Oriented, Swift 4

Ratings: 4.10 / 5.00




Description

Attention

*Please note the course is no longer maintained since 2017.

Why I Created Learn Swift with Bob

As a developer whose first programming language is Swift, I've taken online courses from major platforms. However, I have been frustrated by a lack of detailed explanation from instructors. They tend to focus on final products, thus missing out the fundamentals. I was confused by which design principles to follow, and why. Soon after I've been blogging for the last 5 months, I've discovered this isn't the only problem of mine. I've received hundreds of emails and questions regarding how to write code that does not violate principles such as DRY, modularity, and readability. As a result, I've decided to create this course dedicated for my younger self. I believe it all comes down to the fundamentals which I lacked in the beginning.

Course Overview

There are 10 chapters in this course. From Chapter 1 to 4, you will get a firm understanding of both Intro to Functional, and protocol, and Object Oriented Programming. In Chapter 5, you will fully understand how objects are created and removed. In Chapter 6 and 7, you will learn how to create value oriented swift code along with protocol generics and enums. In the last chapter, you will acquire various advanced and hidden tips about the Swift Programming Language.

Prerequisites

This course is designed for Swift intermediates. So, I won't cover the basics. You may visit the lecture notes and go to prerequisites. You will find a list of items you are expected to know. There is a YouTube video for each concept, so if you ever get stuck, you can always learn and come back. In a nutshell, you should be already be familiar with switch statement, conditional statement, basic operators, functions, and basic object oriented programming. 

Questions

Do you know why Swift engineers have implemented optionals? Do you know what completion handlers and how to design one for your project? Do you know retain cycle within closures and delegates? Do you know the difference between autoclosures, trailing closures, and @escaping closures? Do you know how to create custom operators. Do you truly understand the statement, "Swift is a protocol oriented programming language", and know how to use default protocols such as Equatable, Comparable, Sequence, and Iterator Protocol. Lastly, do you know the difference between normal and recursive enums? If you can't answer all of these questions, I recommend you to take this course and start learning with me. 

Course Resources

  • Group Chat 

  • Lecture Notes

  • Source Code

  • Explanations 

  • Supporting Tutorials 


Bob the Developer

Over thousands of daily visitors from students and iOS developers all around the world. Less than half a year, I became one of the top bloggers standing right next to big named brands. You don't have to question my quality of content. The growth and reputation speak for themselves. 

p.s: Lecture notes, source code, explanations are available at any time. They are created, prepared, and edited by Bob the Developer.

What You Will Learn!

  • Learn the difference between classes and structs and which one to use
  • Learn how to create generic enums, structs, classes, protocols
  • Get a taste of functional programming with trailing, auto, and escaping closures
  • Understand how objects are created and removed through Automatic Reference Counting
  • Understand potential retain cycle in closures, delegate, and class variables
  • Understand Swift is a protocol oriented programming language
  • Apply protocols such as Equatable, Comparable, Sequence, and IteratorProtocol
  • Execute Swift files using Terminal/Command Line
  • Functional Programming

Who Should Attend!

  • Anyone who wants to take his/her game to the next level
  • Anyone who wants to know how to use enums
  • Anyone who wants to learn how to use closures and generics protocols
  • Anyone who has a hard time dealing with error messages from ? and !