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Learning Swift

You're reading from   Learning Swift Build a solid foundation in Swift to develop smart and robust iOS and OS X applications

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2015
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781784392505
Length 266 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Andrew J Wagner Andrew J Wagner
Author Profile Icon Andrew J Wagner
Andrew J Wagner
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Toc

Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introducing Swift FREE CHAPTER 2. Building Blocks – Variables, Collections, and Flow Control 3. One Piece at a Time – Types, Scopes, and Projects 4. To Be or Not to Be – Optionals 5. A Modern Paradigm – Closures and Functional Programming 6. Make Swift Work for You – Protocols and Generics 7. Everything is Connected – Memory Management 8. Writing Code the Swift Way – Design Patterns and Techniques 9. Harnessing the Past – Understanding and Translating Objective-C 10. A Whole New World – Developing an App 11. What's Next? Resources, Advice, and Next Steps Index

Populating our photo grid


Now that we are maintaining a list of photos, we need to display it in our collection view. A collection view is populated when you provide a data source to it that implements its UICollectionViewDataSource protocol. Probably, the most common thing to do is to let the view controller be the data source. We can do this by opening Main.storyboard and control dragging from the collection view to the view controller:

After releasing the mouse, select dataSource from the menu. After that, all we need to do is implement the data source protocol. The two methods we need to implement are collectionView:numberOfItemsInSection: and collectionView:cellForItemAtIndexPath:. The former allows us to specify how many cells should be displayed and the latter allows us to customize each cell for a specific index in our list. It is easy for us to return the number of cells that we want:

extension ViewController: UICollectionViewDataSource {
    func collectionView(
        collectionView...
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