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You're reading from  Swift Cookbook - Second Edition

Product typeBook
Published inFeb 2021
Reading LevelIntermediate
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781839211195
Edition2nd Edition
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Authors (2):
Keith Moon
Keith Moon
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Keith Moon

Keith Moon is an award-winning iOS developer, author and speaker based in London. He has worked with some of the biggest companies in the world to create engaging and personal mobile experiences. Keith has been developing in Swift since its release, working on projects both fully Swift, and mixed Swift and Objective-C. Keith has been invited to speak about Swift development in conferences from Moscow to Minsk and London.
Read more about Keith Moon

Chris Barker
Chris Barker
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Chris Barker

Chris Barker is an iOS developer and tech lead for fashion retailer N Brown (JD Williams, SimplyBe, Jacamo), where he heads up the iOS team. Chris started his career developing .NET applications for online retailer dabs (now BT Shop) before he made his move into mobile app development with digital agency Openshadow (now MyStudioFactory Paris). There, he worked on mobile apps for clients such as Louis Vuitton, L'Oréal Paris, and the Paris Metro. Chris often attends and speaks at local iOS developer meetups and conferences such as NSManchester, Malaga Mobile, and CodeMobile.
Read more about Chris Barker

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Backward compatibility

Backward compatibility is inevitable. Unless you build an app for the latest version of iOS and plan to support that and only that version of iOS, you're going to have to handle backward compatibility at some point. In this recipe, we'll take a look at what Apple offers in terms of building for APIs that have been built with older versions of Swift.

We'll also take a look at migration options from previous versions of Swift and if and how legacy projects can be updated to their latest versions.

How to do it...

We all want to use the latest shiny features in our app. Luckily, Apple makes this relatively easy for us to handle with the use of the #available check. So, how does this work? Well, primarily, it can work in three ways: at the function level, at the class level, and at the inline API level.

Let's start with the latter and have a look at how we would do this at the API level:

  1. Here is an example of setting maskedCorners...
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Swift Cookbook - Second Edition
Published in: Feb 2021Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781839211195

Authors (2)

author image
Keith Moon

Keith Moon is an award-winning iOS developer, author and speaker based in London. He has worked with some of the biggest companies in the world to create engaging and personal mobile experiences. Keith has been developing in Swift since its release, working on projects both fully Swift, and mixed Swift and Objective-C. Keith has been invited to speak about Swift development in conferences from Moscow to Minsk and London.
Read more about Keith Moon

author image
Chris Barker

Chris Barker is an iOS developer and tech lead for fashion retailer N Brown (JD Williams, SimplyBe, Jacamo), where he heads up the iOS team. Chris started his career developing .NET applications for online retailer dabs (now BT Shop) before he made his move into mobile app development with digital agency Openshadow (now MyStudioFactory Paris). There, he worked on mobile apps for clients such as Louis Vuitton, L'Oréal Paris, and the Paris Metro. Chris often attends and speaks at local iOS developer meetups and conferences such as NSManchester, Malaga Mobile, and CodeMobile.
Read more about Chris Barker