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iOS 10 Programming for Beginners

You're reading from   iOS 10 Programming for Beginners Explore the latest iOS 10 and Swift 3 features

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2016
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781786464507
Length 678 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Tools
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Author (1):
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Craig Clayton Craig Clayton
Author Profile Icon Craig Clayton
Craig Clayton
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Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Familiar with Xcode FREE CHAPTER 2. Building a Foundation with Swift 3. Digging Deeper 4. Digging into Collections 5. Starting the UI Setup 6. Setting Up UI 7. Getting Started with the Grid 8. Getting Started with the List 9. Working More with Lists 10. Where Are We? 11. Where's My Data? 12. Foodie Reviews 13. Saving Reviews 14. Universal 15. iMessages 16. Notifications 17. Just a Peek 18. Beta and Store Submission Index

Operations with our Integers

In our Playground, we know that numAge is an Int, but with Ints, we also can write arithmetic expressions using numbers, variables/constants, operators, and parentheses. Let's start with addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division. Add the following into Xcode:

// (+) operator
let numSum = 23 + 20
// (-) operator
let numResult = 32 - numSum
// (*) operator
let numTotal = numResult * 5
// (/) operator
let numDivide = numTotal / 10
Operations with our Integers

So, numSum added two integers (+ operator) together, totaling 43 in our preceding example. Then, we subtracted (- operator) numSum from 32 to create numResult (−11 in our example). After that, we took numResult and multiplied (* operator) it by 5 (see -55 in the Results panel). All of this is pretty basic math—however, you may have noticed something different with our division equation (/ operator). When you divide two integers, the result will be a third integer. So, instead of -55 divided by 10 equaling -5...

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