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About the content This talk was delivered live in March 2017 at try! Swift Tokyo. The video was recorded, produced, and transcribed by Realm, and is published here with the permission of the conference organizers. Don Norman’s "The Design of Everyday Things" is a classic design book, focused on the design of physical objects. Many of the principles that he discusses are also applicable to non-phys
About the content This content has been published here with the express permission of the author. Forcing your users to keep an app open and wait for files to download is like having a tea kettle that only boils water while you stare at it. In this talk, Gwendolyn Weston teaches how to use the iOS Background Transfer Service API to download files in the background, covering common pitfalls and bes
About the content This content has been published here with the express permission of the author. If you’ve ever needed to know how another piece of code works, or have been at the mercy of someone else’s bugs, you can always look at the source code… unless you don’t have it. In this talk, Conrad covers many concepts & tools that can used to reverse-engineer existing apps, as well as debug other l
About the content This content has been published here with the express permission of the author. The Apple Watch operating system now has a proper name and struts some brand new tricks. If you learned how to use WatchKit over the past year, you might find it fun that apps now can run on the Watch hardware and take advantage of the sensors. Ben steps through real-world use cases of apps written fo
About the content This content has been published here with the express permission of the author. No code we write is flawless, but when bugs in Apple’s code leads to our app crashing, we typically cannot do much other than file a radar. However, Sash Zats demonstrates in this talk how we, developers with no access to Apple’s code, can use swizzling and patching to fix bugs in those private framew
About the content This talk was delivered live in March 2015 at Swift Summit London. The video was transcribed by Realm and is published here with the permission of the conference organizers. With the introduction of Swift, incredibly long Objective-C APIs now have the chance to be updated to shorter, more readable methods. However, reducing the number of characters to type does not necessarily in
About the content This content has been published here with the express permission of the author. Promises are a well-known design pattern used to delay evaluation of future values, and to pipeline operations in an asynchronous manner. Typically, there are three internal states used to control the behavior of promises, but there is a lack of core interfaces essential to iOS & OS X development. To
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