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An iOS Developer's Guide to SwiftUI

You're reading from  An iOS Developer's Guide to SwiftUI

Product type Book
Published in May 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801813624
Pages 446 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Michele Fadda Michele Fadda
Profile icon Michele Fadda

Table of Contents (25) Chapters

Preface 1. Part 1: Simple Views
2. Chapter 1: Exploring the Environment – Xcode, Playgrounds, and SwiftUI 3. Chapter 2: Adding Basic UI Elements and Designing Layouts 4. Chapter 3: Adding Interactivity to a SwiftUI View 5. Part 2: Scrollable Views
6. Chapter 4: Iterating Views, Scroll Views, FocusState, Lists, and Scroll View Reader 7. Chapter 5: The Art of Displaying Grids 8. Part 3: SwiftUI Navigation
9. Chapter 6: Tab Bars and Modal View Presentation 10. Chapter 7: All About Navigation 11. Part 4: Graphics and Animation
12. Chapter 8: Creating Custom Graphics 13. Chapter 9: An Introduction to Animations in SwiftUI 14. Part 5: App Architecture
15. Chapter 10: App Architecture and SwiftUI Part I: Practical Tools 16. Chapter 11: App Architecture and SwiftUI Part II – the Theory 17. Part 6: Beyond Basics
18. Chapter 12: Persistence with Core Data 19. Chapter 13: Modern Structured Concurrency 20. Chapter 14: An Introduction to SwiftData 21. Chapter 15: Consuming REST Services in SwiftUI 22. Chapter 16: Exploring the Apple Vision Pro 23. Index 24. Other Books You May Enjoy

Using CALayers in SwiftUI

SwiftUI does not support CALayers directly, the equivalent functionality has been essentially combined within Views themselves.

There is also no compelling reason to use CALayers to obtain further acceleration, as that has also been implemented by other means in SwiftUI; in particular, there is no need to use CALayers to render really complex hierarchies of views because SwiftUI does not use Auto Layout. In UIKit, that would have had a rendering cost that increases with the number of views to be rendered. There is not a “layer” abstraction on top of View in SwiftUI.

That said, there are times when you need to implement code that was originally developed for UIKit. SwiftUI provides a protocol, UIViewRepresentable, that can be used for this purpose and allows to basically embed a UIView within a SwiftUI view.

If you need to use a custom UIView within SwiftUI, bear in mind that it is faster to use CALayers rather than Core Graphics.

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