I was feeling confident today whilst I watched Day 4’s Hacking With SwiftUI video and read all optional reading. Boy, was I in for a slight wake up call. I watched the challenge video and if you didn’t know, hints are provided mid-way. I stopped and really gave it some thought. I got the first part nailed but I had to go back over previous lessons/literature and I was still pretty stumped. I then listened to the ‘hints’ and was still in the dark. I was reminded that I’m not meant to know all this yet, I’m learning. After more frustration and further reading - I got there. Well, Xcode isn’t shouting at me and I got an answer - We’ll count that as a result!
It's Time - I'm Learning SwiftUI
As I look back on the journey I took with tech, there has always been a nagging feeling of something I didn’t do—learn to program. I’ve dipped my toes into C++; I’ve stuck my nose into Python, and I even tried a few poor attempts at Unity game design, but nothing ever stuck. The truth is, I really do like Apple products, and as much as I use a PC more times than not during work, I love my Mac, iPhone, iPad, etc. It’s that ecosystem, right? I got my first Mac in my teens after waiting a long time and spending way too many hours watching and reading everything about them. I was absolutely obsessed with that machine. (If you’re wondering, it was the white plastic MacBook—the thing was beautiful. Well, until I wore out where I rested my hands!) I still feel the rush I had back then getting a new Apple product and working on MacOS.
I have finally settled on learning SwiftUI. I did a lot of research on UI vs. UIKit and where to even begin! I needed to find recommendations as this is something I’m doing without the luxury of a university course where someone was going to teach me personally. The internet points to one source in particular: 100 Days of SwiftUI I’m not only using this, but I’m using it as a base and something I should at least be completing daily. I’m also looking at books and other tutorials, but this as a general consensus is a good starting point. One of the ‘rules’ is that you should really share your progress. I’m doing so on Twitter but also want somewhere that I can write more openly and not annoy my more gaming-focused Twitter followers!
Please feel free to comment or follow along - I’m sure this will be full of rants, joys, and everything in between.