Unwrap
Vapor
Our great sponsors
Unwrap | Vapor | |
---|---|---|
87 | 57 | |
2,268 | 23,797 | |
- | 0.6% | |
0.0 | 8.3 | |
4 months ago | 3 days ago | |
Swift | Swift | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
Unwrap
-
Ask HN: What Are You Learning?
Happy too! So my main resource is Hacking With Swift (https://www.hackingwithswift.com), specifically the 100 days of SwiftUI Course. It takes you over Swift and SwiftUI. I've paired this with the official Swift site (https://www.swift.org) so I can dig into the language more, and Apple Documentation where appropriate to get used to using the tools.
In terms of finding it, it was a bit of a shot in the dark. I did some poking around and this popped up the most, specifically because I was looking for iOS specific materials. I'm sure if you want to make cross platform apps there's probably a whole host of great resources!
-
SwiftUI - Row of Buttons Acting As One
Thanks to Paul Hudson at Hacking With Swift, I recently learned that what I thought was a bug in SwiftUI is actually a feature. Paul says in one of his 100 Days of SwiftUI videos - which I highly highly recommend for anyone wanting to learn Swift and/or SwiftUI - even the most experienced iOS developers are often gobsmacked by this quirk of the code. I knew right away what he was talking about - I had encountered it myself, turned in a feedback report to Apple, and found a work-around. But according to Paul, it's not a bug, it's a feature! He encourages his viewers to spread the word, so that's what I'm doing.
-
Ask HN: Good Resources to Learn iOS Development
The two I can think off of the top of my head are Paul Hudson's web site https://www.hackingwithswift.com and the old Ray Wenderlich site which is now called Kodeco https://www.kodeco.com/home.
Another good resource is Standford's CS193p - Developing Applications for iOS using SwiftUI which is online at https://cs193p.sites.stanford.edu.
Should be more than enough to get started.
-
Where to Learn MacOS Development - everything is about iOS - how did you learn?
Paul Hudson is pretty good at not forgetting the Mac: Hacking With Swift but TBH things are pretty similar, sometimes you need to replace UI... with NS... and import another framework but if you have something in mind to build for the Mac just start doing it, the rest will come.
-
Hacking with Swift - Day 0
Hacking with Swift website has a lot of resources (https://www.hackingwithswift.com
-
Ask HN: Advice on Starting a YouTube Channel?
disclaimer: no channel, just an observer
Is YouTube the only medium you're considering?
For business, my understanding is that people now find success mainly though multi-channel and upgrade channels, so you would have some shorts/tic-toks, substack, instagram, twitter, ... (Which suggests some IDE support for the various artifacts being repurposed...) The goal seems to be to convert ~0.5% of the free folks to the $200 upsell: the batch of books, the online course (esp. if constantly updated). See e.g., Kat Norton, https://www.hackingwithswift.com, ...
While my personal preference runs to no-fluff-just-stuff, success seems to lie in motivating people with each step, with curiosity and enthusiasm, in part because that targets people who want to do X, but find themselves blocked (in part from frustration, loneliness, ...). It's probably a lot easier to unblock people who are just confused and frustrated, than to give focused people real insight. It may be more valuable as well, to lift all boats.
-
📣 Apollo will close down on June 30th. Reddit’s recent decisions and actions have unfortunately made it impossible for Apollo to continue. Thank you so, so much for all the support over the years. ❤️
Anything Paul Hudson (https://www.hackingwithswift.com)
-
Job offered to pay me to learn Swift as the only iOS developer. What's an ideal route for me to take to learn?
Hacking with Swift. is free and comprehensive.
- Recommendations to learn iOS app development?
-
IOS DEVELOPMENT
Check out Hacking With Swift it’s what I used to get started
Vapor
-
Swiftly Chatting: Building Chatbots with Botter
Botter works in tandem with Vapor, which handles the server-side functions of your project. This powerful combination allows you to focus on what matters most - creating an engaging and effective chatbot.
-
Issue with Vapor Server
// swift-tools-version: 5.8 // The swift-tools-version declares the minimum version of Swift required to build this package. import PackageDescription let package = Package( name: "MyServer", platforms: [.macOS("12.0")], products: [ // Products define the executables and libraries a package produces, and make them visible to other packages. .executable( name: "MyServer", targets: ["MyServer"]), ], dependencies: [ .package(url: "https://github.com/vapor/vapor.git", .upToNextMajor(from: "4.70.0")), // Dependencies declare other packages that this package depends on. // .package(url: /* package url */, from: "1.0.0"), ], targets: [ // Targets are the basic building blocks of a package. A target can define a module or a test suite. // Targets can depend on other targets in this package, and on products in packages this package depends on. .executableTarget( name: "MyServer", dependencies: [ .product(name: "Vapor", package: "vapor") ]), .testTarget( name: "MyServerTests", dependencies: ["MyServer"]), ] )
-
Is it possible/straightforward to have a webserver baked in to an iOS app?
Otherwise there's https://github.com/vapor/vapor
- A Look at the Crystal Programming Language for Humans
-
Most effective approach for building a client/server application (MacOS)
The Swift/Vapor project is a relatively easy way to do it.
-
First contract, how much should I charge?
Opening this webpage (https://vapor.codes) cranks my CPU (5800x3d) to 100% instantly. Why?
-
Swift outside the Apple ecosystem
Vapor is the most popular non-Apple-ecosystem Swift project. There have been a few others, but none particularly popular.
-
Idea for small project? (without touching any UI)
Server-side apps (typically via Vapor)
-
Why I selected Elixir and Phoenix as my main stack
My first option other than PHP was using Swift and Vapor. I have made some projects with iOS and Objective-C, maybe I could also learn Swift and create both native iOS apps and backends with the same language.
-
I've just released my new app which allows you to use your iPhone as a webcam when livestreaming
StreamCam is written 100% in Swift, SwiftUI & Combine. The serverside is handled with Vapor.
What are some alternatives?
swift-corelibs-foundation - The Foundation Project, providing core utilities, internationalization, and OS independence
Perfect - Server-side Swift. The Perfect core toolset and framework for Swift Developers. (For mobile back-end development, website and API development, and more…)
ios-oss - Kickstarter for iOS. Bring new ideas to life, anywhere.
Alamofire - Elegant HTTP Networking in Swift
Publish - A static site generator for Swift developers
Kitura - A Swift web framework and HTTP server.
SwiftShield - 🔒 Swift Obfuscator that protects iOS apps against reverse engineering attacks.
hummingbird - Lightweight, flexible HTTP server framework written in Swift
ACHNBrowserUI - Animal Crossing New Horizon companion app in SwiftUI
swifter - Tiny http server engine written in Swift programming language.
BreadBuddy - Recipe scheduler for iOS
GCDWebServer - The #1 HTTP server for iOS, macOS & tvOS (also includes web based uploader & WebDAV server)