![]() This course has been updated since I finished it but it’s still obsolete as it only covers Swift 3 (while I’m writing this, we’re already on Swift 4.2). □ Course 1: The Complete iOS 8 and Swift Course by Rob Percival The goal of this article is to show you how much went into teaching myself and not to give you a list of things to follow to be up to date with today’s state of iOS developement.Īt the end of this post, I added a mini roadmap with the courses I would recommend to follow for someone who would start learning today. Some of the courses listed below are obsolete as I’m writing this blog. How did I teach myself how to build iOS Apps with Swift? And Apple wouldn’t launch a brand new language if it wasn’t to support it and put effort behind it. Obj-c looked super ugly to write while Swift was the shiny new stuff. That will sound crazy to some of you but I picked Swift for two reasons. I already owned a Mac & an iPhone so the decision was quite easy for me. Research: Googling around for programming languages…Īnswer: Ok iOS = Swift or Obj-c, Android = Java (Kotlin didn’t exist yet when I started)Īnswer: iOS = Mac & iPhone or iPad needed (unless you want to boot a Windows Machine with MacOS … but good luck with that) Android = Any laptop that can run Android Studio & an Android device. Question: Android or iOS? Windows (LOL) Blackberry (LOOOOL)? Question: Building apps… ok but how? What should I learn? Building apps? Which platform? Which language?Īs described in my first post, I broke down the main goal into smaller questions until I got to clear conclusions. In this second part, I’ll go through the list of online courses, books and other resources I used to teach myself ”how to build iOS apps.” 1. If you missed Part 1, it’s not too late to catch up and read about how I went from zero to my first (real) program.
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