I am not the biggest Apple fan in the world, and will probably not use Swift professionally, but I'm still super enthused about it as a language and I am glad it's entering the marketplace. We're going to have sum types and type inference in a mainstream language! For the first time, professors can teach a language like SML and have a good response to the question "so how is this going to help me in the real world?" I really, genuinely hope this will lead to better choices of languages in introductory programming classes.
Hey guys, do you know if swift will be ever open-sourced? After the WWDC they said that was early to <i></i>think<i></i> about it while in beta. So, what's the status now?
"You can now submit your apps that use Swift to the App Store. "-that's great news!<p>For Hackers in SF: We are running a Swift Hackday at GitHub HQ on the 27th September. There will be food, drink, swag and lots of other Swift hackers! Check it out & RSVP at <a href="http://SwiftHack.splashthat.com" rel="nofollow">http://SwiftHack.splashthat.com</a>
So, what kind of 1.0 release is this?<p>- It's Keynote time/September 9, so we call what we have, crashing bugs included, 1.0.<p>- We culled the features that do not work reliably yet, polished the good parts, and called it 1.0.<p>- This is a/the set of features that we consider to form a good product, and all features work reasonably well.
Can anyone tell me about the interop situation? I'm working on my first iOS app and doing it all the old way with Obj-C, and some things have been a little difficult to grok even though they've been around a while(AVFoundation). I'm very interested in the new Metal graphics API that Apple showed at their presentation. Not sure if I should just switch to Swift for everything now or continue learning/working in Obj-C and slowly transition.
I have a list of Swift resources that I've been collecting: <a href="http://www.h4labs.com/dev/ios/swift.html" rel="nofollow">http://www.h4labs.com/dev/ios/swift.html</a>
Stupid question but is Swift just compiled into Objective-C? I'm asking because I'd like to know if I can write an app in Swift that can run on iOS6.
This might be a stupid question, but does Objective-C have versions? Objective-C was always talked about in terms of the iOS version, even when the language itself was changing (eg blocks).
My brother has been using swift to learn some programming.<p>I don't have a mac, let alone iTunes.<p>Is there a legal way for me to download/purchase a manual to help him with his progress?
That's fantastic! Now, too bad I can't watch your video tutorials on my Macbook Pro using Chrome. Or Windows 7 using Chrome. The messaging on the site declares it requires Safari. So much of the open web... Quietly moves along to Android.
I can't believe Apple would release a brand-new language with zero baked-in support for concurrency. In this day and age? Looks like developers will have to resort to 2nd grade efforts like GCD. I just don't get it. There's no excuse for it. Port Go's channels and go-routines to it, or something else, but come on - it's 2014, not 1998?
Sorry, I'm pretty sure you meant Swift has reached 2.0. And that was a couple of months ago. Also why are you people talking about Swift like it's a programming language and not an object storage system? :)<p><a href="http://opensource.com/business/14/7openstack-swift-brings-storage-policies" rel="nofollow">http://opensource.com/business/14/7openstack-swift-brings-st...</a>