0:00 Intro 2:08 | Core Skills: = 3:39 | Swift = 4:32 | SwiftUI = 8:07 | Networking = 8:28 | Working with Data = 9:22 | Version Control 11:10 | Extension Skills = 11:59 | UIKit = 15:13 | Core Data = 16:39 | Testing = 18:50 | Architecture = 21:13 | Multithreading 22:57 | Common mistakes = 23:41 | Memorizing everything = 26:53 | Shiny object Syndrom = 28:21 | Lone wolf learning = 29:37 | Using beta software = 30:56 | Relying on Apple's documentation = 32:10 | Getting lost in Objective-C = 33:14 | Taking shots at other languages 34:11 | Learning resourcess = 35:40 | Apple Own Resources = 36:36 | Paul's Own Free Tutorials = 37:32 | RUclips Tutorials = 38:13 | Learning Apps = 38:51 | Forums Online 39:19 | Connecting to the community = 39:49 | Twitter = 42:59 | Newsletters, Slack, Meetups, Forums, Conferences and more 44:48 | How lont it will take? = 45:11 | Don't rush thru courses = 46:56 | Your background = 49:51 | Be resilient 51:05 | Preparing to apply for a job As an about to start iOS Developer with CS background I really appreciate you Paul for doing such quality content. Hope to see you around on my way up. Made this so that is easier to navigate for others (All the video is such worth). You can add it to your video descrtiption and it will work natively with RUclips. Thx for all Paul
OK, me: the mistakes: 1) Memorizing - Got it-I've espoused this to my tech students for years. 2) Shiny Object Syndrome - Man, I thought that was a good thing. Back off, ADHD. 3) Lone wolf learning - Um, that's my main M.O., all my life. How does this Paul know me so well? ;) 4) Relying on Apple's documentation - Man, I was using that for late night reading material. ;) Seriously, point taken. 5) Getting lost in Objective-C - You are preaching to the choir, Master Hudson. 6) Taking shots on other languages - Good advice, especially when a lot of the jobs I see use other languages or scripting in conjunction with Swift (e.g., PHP). Excellent video, worth repeated viewings to help keep a focused perspective. Except the 4-5 hours a day-for me, I need to be soaking in it, and I don't want to do anything to stop this ball from rolling as well as it is. I guess everyone may have one exception to the rule.
I’m a Semi-Senior React Developer and I’m really interested in learning native iOS development. I found your channel and it’s helping me a lot so far, thank you for your great job!
This has solidified my decision to learn Swift in 2022. I've been half-heartedly trying to learn a language for the last 5 or so years, time to buckle down and like you said, get rid of "shiny object syndrome" and just commit to learning it. Apple isn't going anywhere, and while it might feel "limiting" to learn a specific language, it does open you up to developing for Apple's entire ecosystem, which is nice. I really just want to build a scriptwriting app for myself, but learning the skills that will let me do that will lead to another income source for me as well, so it's a win win.
Now im even more tempted to learn Swift and SwiftUI. Your course was recommended to me a thousand times and im starting a bootcamp in a few months and for preparation im using your course. thank you so much for the work you've put in!
Hello Paul. I just started your 100 Days of SwiftUI course, and I must say that this first video has been very inspiring. Thank you for your time and dedication in making this course free. You are a wonderful person and have great communication skills. Plus, you have two adorable dogs. It's clear that you are a fabulous person. Thank you.
I just got a Senior Software Engineer role, main with react, just to know that I love the little things that I have done with swift just for study, now I will study every night, weekend, holiday, until I got maybe a mid-level Ios Engineer at the end of this year! Wish me luck! Just started a clone of the Netflix app!
Thank you Paul I have spent a lot of time learning different programming languages but you encouraged me to start a new journey with Apple and swift. Thank you again.
Goal is definitely to get an iOS dev position for me and I’ve failed a few first-round interviews. It does feel a bit discouraging at times, but I know I will get better and will eventually land that position I’ve always wanted. Thank you Paul for all the free content you provide to the community and it’s much appreciated 🙏🏼
Always nice to watch this video once in a while. The code so bad you’ll break the Geneva convention section keeps me going. Thanks again Paul, really appreciate it.
It’s a great explanation ! I would put UIKit in core skills. I’d point out that you need to know UICollectionView, UITableView, auto layout, text field and text view and segmented control. I’d focus on very basic principles.
Thank you Paul for your tremendous contribution to the community. I'm enjoy your videos, always makes me feel better. I love when the dogs come in. Have a good day!
Thank you Paul, you encouraged me to keep learning my swift & swift UI. I have learned 3 months and know how to do some basic mission. To be honest, it is not easy for me as a rookie in coding industry. I really hope you can make a video to show all the new learners about the routine job we need to do as an ios developer. I am so confused about how to use what I have learned to do works or finish the missions. Thank you. Subscribed.😄
Well, first of all, I thank you very much for making this video. Almost 1 year ago I arrived in the United States and I started from 0. I currently work at a McDonalds but I have always been interested in the technological world and today, researching and watching your videos, I am motivated to start my learning in the world of mobile development for ios . Thanks to you I have the general topics that I must cover. Now I am looking for a roadmap to delve into each general topic that you gave and know which route I should follow or at least where I should continue to be guided to start this adventure. I love apple and the entire ecosystem, I will persevere on this path.
I’m really happy I watched this video in its entirety. Sometimes I stop working on my project for months because I’m afraid to ask a question on stack.
I currently work at a large company as an SDK developer which is used by all of our clients. Some of which are mobile apps, and I have been leading the teams push to move to SwiftUI and all of our newer internal features are built using SwiftUI. But its taking time since SwiftUI wasn’t really usable until iOS 14 and we have to support older OS versions for user facing features. It seems like a lot of big apps target versions as old as iOS 12 so I’m guessing SwiftUI is around 2 years away from being a real UIKit replacement.
Paul, thanks for an excellent overview of the iOS landscape. I am venturing into learning iOS not for a job but as a new field to learn on my continuous learning path as I retire from my 35 year career. I found this overview very useful and focused on important points that really matter. I hope to gain some quick iOS ground by following your advise.
Described mistakes are not only about Swift, but they are more about general teaching rules for all the programmers That’s incredible thoughts for beginners and even regular devs
I really just started to your course. Things you share below your video shows what a perfect human you are!!! Thank you sincerely! Even this made believe that I will learn a lot of things from you 100 days of Swift journey. Greetings from Istanbul
Hi Paul - I am a beginner and about to embark on the 100 days of SwiftUI journey, but I have one question... is this course from 2021 still 100% relevant today? Or have there been any changes that make parts of this course... different than Swift/Xcode/etc. from 2023?
Paul, thank you! I'm just beginning my journey and am very happy to find you and your channel. You have given me a plan of action that I will follow for as long as I need to.
so i learned swift on my own and at my own pace for a year or so and then quit before the pandemic hit...looking to get back into it, hopefully this video is still relevant for 2022....thank you
I can’t emphasize learning git enough. I’ve worked at companies where you have senior and lead developers not knowing how to use git properly And causing massive problems like force pushing and blowing up master.
Thank you for your guidance. I love that you mentioned having more willpower because that is important for people like me to not rush or skip ahead while learning the core skills
Microsoft uses Objective-C in their office products. Because the backend is written in C++ and you don't want to mix large amounts of C++ with Swift. Thats also why my just started program in 2021 starts with objective-c. I'm confident that it will not get dropped in the next 20 years. And if you think Objective-C is bad, you have not gotten into Objective-C++ with C++20.
hey Paul! starting my journey today, if everything went okay, I'll be finishing it by december 1st. hope comeback here to say that I had a blast and you made my dream possible. :-)
Paul, great video! As usual. But I cannot agree with one of your arguments that UIKit is an extension skill. It seems to me that nowadays most of the IT companies require a good foundation of UIKit and you can see SwiftUI in the job requirements rarely. SwiftUI is a great framework and we as the developers should pay a lot of attention to it, but yet it is extremely crucial to cover all UIKit basics and more in order to land a job.
@@shazyoutube UIKit will be around for a long time! Many larger companies still use Obj-C. Who do you think will be servicing the currently existing 10's of thousands of apps all built in UIKit? You absolutly need a strong skillset in both if you plan t compete in future job markets. And UIKit if you want a job right now. Maybe for an Indie dev, SwiftUI only might be good advice.
I am so grateful for all the continuous contributions in which Paul Hudson makes… sometimes i feel i dont know if I’m able to break through certain learning barriers but just watching his videos and reading his books give me confidence to become relentless in my thought process and applications in learning swift by understanding the basics and go slow to improve faster and better in the future…Thank you so much :-)
Thank you, Paul, I will have a job interview in 2 days and I was so worried about what should I know about swift. Now I am relaxed a bit and gonna work more efficiently for my interview. You're great, your tutorials helped me a lot ^^
An incredible resource for someone getting started. It’s easy to get completely overwhelmed with all of the information and learning paths. Thanks for distilling it down for us!✊🏼
I am not Paul...but in my experience CS193p is very organized and great course, however, a bit intensive and fast-paced. It could be easier to start with 100 days of SwiftUI.
@@dirrren5770 Thank you Shining, I agree it is a bit intensive. I started it and as soon as the second lesson, generics and MVVM are introduced in the same lesson which is quite challenging.
I love swift since last year June 2021 and did a udemy course for 6 months and stopped because i was interested in machine leanring but after watching your video you're right i shouldn't beat my self up it takes awhile since i started at 0(no background) it might take 1 year thanks for the video its been really helpful
Thank you for the thorough overview, Paul! I'm transitioning from a web dev role to iOS development bc I love coding with Apple devices/the community. This lays out some stuff I need to explore for sure, will try to start with 100 days of SwiftUI!
You explain everything so beautifully that every time I have a problem I go straight to your website and bam! You’ve explained it there. I just want to thank you and say that I appreciate your efforts.
I had some experience in python, c, c#, and js before I started learning Swift. I was hired exactly after 3 month of learning it, while getting CS degree. So at least if u have a bit of tech background it’s totally possible to get a job in 2-3 month, if u have no background I’d like to say 6 month is a more real point where u probably know enough to be a junior dev, 9-12 is when u know enough for sure, and even a bit more. So good luck and patience for all the beginners here, u can do it 😌
Oh my God! You just explained everything and I have been doing it the wrong way.. Thank you so much for letting me know about this things, I am so happy I watched this video.
I just got confused... So, I'm starting my plans to migrate from QA to iOS Developer. Should I follow the 100 days with SwiftUI or 100 days with Swift to start this? What is your recommendation?
When I see the title, I said to myself to watch just the first minute as I already have a job as an iOS developer, but Paul put so much effort to this and this is very helpful and informative so I ended watching the whole video. Thanks Paul!
Thank you so much mate. I really appreciate your help. I was feeling depressed and helpless and I just found your videos and website. Now, I have a hope and more importantly I have found a subject that I love and I can improve myself.
Best of luck - I wish you every success! And don't be too hard to on yourself; learning anything new is tricky at times, and I hope you feel able to reach out for help on Slack, Twitter, the forums, or similar 👍
Swift is a great language, and iOS is a nice framework. Too bad Xcode is absolutely horrendous and a tiny fraction as enjoyable to work with when compared to VS Code. I wish there was a way I could easily use VS Code to develop iOS apps.
For a job, you recommend SwiftUI over UIKit? Coming from C++ and Java. And hating JS. Swift and obj c idiosyncrasies have been a warm welcome. And you have been instrumental in my understanding of the esoteric. Wish me luck. Need to make money before law school :[
Edit - well received. Took me 3 months and 2 capstones to understand UIKit. (Still *do not * understand UIKit, but I think that that’s thematic to the framework). For comparison, The MERN stack took 1.5 months.
You are so fantastic! In this video I think you shared everything I need to start and anwered all my questions about starting a Swift(UI) job. Thank you!
Outstanding advice thank you Paul. From someone who developed their first app using ObC 10 yrs ago and found it VERY painful. Looking forward to using these resources and re-entering iOS dev with swift.
Thank you Paul, After much confusions and conversations whether to go with famous web development or iOS development I decided with iOS development. But still I am sceptical whether it's a good decision or not. Because I am 32, I have no coding experience and wanted to switch from my successful digital marketing career. This video gave me that confidence. Thank you and I am sticking with iOS. Let's build those apps
everyone says the same. but beginners like me who needs to know something like what are api's, third party libraries, frameworks etc how to use them? i know how to code something using swift or any other language, but i don't know what to do with that code. can you please make a single video which will cover everything a beginner should know. I'm very serious about learning swift but when someone asks me these question i literarily feel demotivated.
yeah every job description wants us to know TDD, CD, UIKit(even though they will probably switch to swiftui soon), mvvm, mvc, system design, plus more. Like how many things does one person need to know?
@@richoffks Topics apart from fading-away UIKit and Middle-to-Senior skill of system design are easily learnable in one week. At least to the level to get junior job
0:00 Intro
2:08 | Core Skills:
= 3:39 | Swift
= 4:32 | SwiftUI
= 8:07 | Networking
= 8:28 | Working with Data
= 9:22 | Version Control
11:10 | Extension Skills
= 11:59 | UIKit
= 15:13 | Core Data
= 16:39 | Testing
= 18:50 | Architecture
= 21:13 | Multithreading
22:57 | Common mistakes
= 23:41 | Memorizing everything
= 26:53 | Shiny object Syndrom
= 28:21 | Lone wolf learning
= 29:37 | Using beta software
= 30:56 | Relying on Apple's documentation
= 32:10 | Getting lost in Objective-C
= 33:14 | Taking shots at other languages
34:11 | Learning resourcess
= 35:40 | Apple Own Resources
= 36:36 | Paul's Own Free Tutorials
= 37:32 | RUclips Tutorials
= 38:13 | Learning Apps
= 38:51 | Forums Online
39:19 | Connecting to the community
= 39:49 | Twitter
= 42:59 | Newsletters, Slack, Meetups, Forums, Conferences and more
44:48 | How lont it will take?
= 45:11 | Don't rush thru courses
= 46:56 | Your background
= 49:51 | Be resilient
51:05 | Preparing to apply for a job
As an about to start iOS Developer with CS background I really appreciate you Paul for doing such quality content. Hope to see you around on my way up. Made this so that is easier to navigate for others (All the video is such worth). You can add it to your video descrtiption and it will work natively with RUclips. Thx for all Paul
HStack {
Text("Cheers bro"
Image(systemimage: "heart"
}
What a video! Honestly, if RUclips had MVP awards, this would be it!
That's for sure, all clear !!! :)
See Paul’s hair? He’s aged more than avg. because of his iOS development obsession.
Definitely not the Minimum Viable Product, idk what you’re talking about
I can only underline that.
I will shurly use your advice and your great material
This is almost as long as a college lecture, and I did not wan't to close the video or skip ahead once. Good video!
OK, me: the mistakes:
1) Memorizing - Got it-I've espoused this to my tech students for years.
2) Shiny Object Syndrome - Man, I thought that was a good thing. Back off, ADHD.
3) Lone wolf learning - Um, that's my main M.O., all my life. How does this Paul know me so well? ;)
4) Relying on Apple's documentation - Man, I was using that for late night reading material. ;) Seriously, point taken.
5) Getting lost in Objective-C - You are preaching to the choir, Master Hudson.
6) Taking shots on other languages - Good advice, especially when a lot of the jobs I see use other languages or scripting in conjunction with Swift (e.g., PHP).
Excellent video, worth repeated viewings to help keep a focused perspective.
Except the 4-5 hours a day-for me, I need to be soaking in it, and I don't want to do anything to stop this ball from rolling as well as it is. I guess everyone may have one exception to the rule.
I’m a Semi-Senior React Developer and I’m really interested in learning native iOS development. I found your channel and it’s helping me a lot so far, thank you for your great job!
Literally same!
This has solidified my decision to learn Swift in 2022. I've been half-heartedly trying to learn a language for the last 5 or so years, time to buckle down and like you said, get rid of "shiny object syndrome" and just commit to learning it. Apple isn't going anywhere, and while it might feel "limiting" to learn a specific language, it does open you up to developing for Apple's entire ecosystem, which is nice. I really just want to build a scriptwriting app for myself, but learning the skills that will let me do that will lead to another income source for me as well, so it's a win win.
Im right here with you!
I'm already a senior software developer (C/C++/Java etc.) on Windows and Linux, now I start again as a junior on apple system - I'm so excited! :-)
i am confident that one day i will be a senior ios developer and the reason behind that confidence is paul hudson..
Same
Hi Paul! i'm just starting with your tuturials, and I love the passion you have teaching! I hope to learn more with you!
29:20 I love the lone wolf in a pack lmao (but I do see your point)
Now im even more tempted to learn Swift and SwiftUI. Your course was recommended to me a thousand times and im starting a bootcamp in a few months and for preparation im using your course. thank you so much for the work you've put in!
How did it go? What sort of bootcamp did you connect up with?
Hello Paul. I just started your 100 Days of SwiftUI course, and I must say that this first video has been very inspiring. Thank you for your time and dedication in making this course free. You are a wonderful person and have great communication skills. Plus, you have two adorable dogs. It's clear that you are a fabulous person. Thank you.
Thank you, Paul! I'm starting my Swift study journey.
I just got a Senior Software Engineer role, main with react, just to know that I love the little things that I have done with swift just for study, now I will study every night, weekend, holiday, until I got maybe a mid-level Ios Engineer at the end of this year!
Wish me luck! Just started a clone of the Netflix app!
Thank you Paul I have spent a lot of time learning different programming languages but you encouraged me to start a new journey with Apple and swift. Thank you again.
great video. keen on starting your 100 day course now!
just a tiny FYI: some of the twitter accounts in description no longer exists.
Goal is definitely to get an iOS dev position for me and I’ve failed a few first-round interviews. It does feel a bit discouraging at times, but I know I will get better and will eventually land that position I’ve always wanted. Thank you Paul for all the free content you provide to the community and it’s much appreciated 🙏🏼
Best of luck! 🚀
Have you finally got it? And were you applying for a junior dev?
@@MrSojek I actually did. I’ve been working for almost 3 months now and it’s a pretty cool project.
@@marcoespinoza3327 Gratz!! I'm very happy for you...
@@marcoespinoza3327 bro how and where did you find a job?
Always nice to watch this video once in a while. The code so bad you’ll break the Geneva convention section keeps me going. Thanks again Paul, really appreciate it.
37:42 I feel so exciting, I am learning Swift UI from Chris's videos.
It’s a great explanation !
I would put UIKit in core skills. I’d point out that you need to know UICollectionView, UITableView, auto layout, text field and text view and segmented control. I’d focus on very basic principles.
I totally agree with you
Not really in my opinion. New developers are better off focusing on SwiftUI and Swift.
Thank you Paul for your tremendous contribution to the community. I'm enjoy your videos, always makes me feel better.
I love when the dogs come in. Have a good day!
You are the best wow ,because most of people present us a lot of things
Thank you Paul, you encouraged me to keep learning my swift & swift UI. I have learned 3 months and know how to do some basic mission. To be honest, it is not easy for me as a rookie in coding industry. I really hope you can make a video to show all the new learners about the routine job we need to do as an ios developer. I am so confused about how to use what I have learned to do works or finish the missions. Thank you. Subscribed.😄
Simply the best course of iOS ever. I know it from this very first video. I am taking this 100 days challenge on SwiftUI. Thanks Paul!
Day 1 today. Great video. I'm not sure whether to be scared or excited. Scratch that, it's excited.
This man is a treasure. Protect him at all costs.
I put this comment in the first 50 seconds to just say that this Paul is very a nice guy , I like the passion he has for us
Well, first of all, I thank you very much for making this video. Almost 1 year ago I arrived in the United States and I started from 0. I currently work at a McDonalds but I have always been interested in the technological world and today, researching and watching your videos, I am motivated to start my learning in the world of mobile development for ios . Thanks to you I have the general topics that I must cover. Now I am looking for a roadmap to delve into each general topic that you gave and know which route I should follow or at least where I should continue to be guided to start this adventure. I love apple and the entire ecosystem, I will persevere on this path.
I’m really happy I watched this video in its entirety. Sometimes I stop working on my project for months because I’m afraid to ask a question on stack.
Hi Paul, thanks for sharing this. Is the slack community link still functional? I'd like to get the new link if there's any
Paul, you're an awesome human being. Thank you for existing.
I currently work at a large company as an SDK developer which is used by all of our clients. Some of which are mobile apps, and I have been leading the teams push to move to SwiftUI and all of our newer internal features are built using SwiftUI. But its taking time since SwiftUI wasn’t really usable until iOS 14 and we have to support older OS versions for user facing features. It seems like a lot of big apps target versions as old as iOS 12 so I’m guessing SwiftUI is around 2 years away from being a real UIKit replacement.
This may be most helpful resource for learning ios development! Thanks Paul!
You just gave a very clear path for my returning to the developer's world. This video means a lot to me and watched it twice
Thanks Paul for your encouragement and conscientous teaching and guiding.
dude this is the most informative video of this type on yt
Paul, thanks for an excellent overview of the iOS landscape. I am venturing into learning iOS not for a job but as a new field to learn on my continuous learning path as I retire from my 35 year career. I found this overview very useful and focused on important points that really matter. I hope to gain some quick iOS ground by following your advise.
Described mistakes are not only about Swift, but they are more about general teaching rules for all the programmers
That’s incredible thoughts for beginners and even regular devs
I started making some simple interfaces on swift UI but then I felt lost in where to go next. This video helped me to get back on track. Thanks
I really just started to your course. Things you share below your video shows what a perfect human you are!!! Thank you sincerely! Even this made believe that I will learn a lot of things from you 100 days of Swift journey. Greetings from Istanbul
Hi Paul - I am a beginner and about to embark on the 100 days of SwiftUI journey, but I have one question... is this course from 2021 still 100% relevant today? Or have there been any changes that make parts of this course... different than Swift/Xcode/etc. from 2023?
Paul, thank you! I'm just beginning my journey and am very happy to find you and your channel. You have given me a plan of action that I will follow for as long as I need to.
so i learned swift on my own and at my own pace for a year or so and then quit before the pandemic hit...looking to get back into it, hopefully this video is still relevant for 2022....thank you
Thank you so much Paul you're videos have been very helpful
In the description time frame is wrong
11:50 is Extension skills that set you apart
Thank you! I've fixed this now.
I can’t emphasize learning git enough.
I’ve worked at companies where you have senior and lead developers not knowing how to use git properly And causing massive problems like force pushing and blowing up master.
Thank you for your guidance. I love that you mentioned having more willpower because that is important for people like me to not rush or skip ahead while learning the core skills
Microsoft uses Objective-C in their office products. Because the backend is written in C++ and you don't want to mix large amounts of C++ with Swift.
Thats also why my just started program in 2021 starts with objective-c. I'm confident that it will not get dropped in the next 20 years.
And if you think Objective-C is bad, you have not gotten into Objective-C++ with C++20.
I've been developing Android software since 2017 and now I'm excited to also learn iOS development.
You are the best on RUclips teaching swift
Thanks for the awesome information and support! Your channel and program was recommended to me from an Apple developer :-)
Absolutely fantastic video, specifically for someone new to programming,
hey Paul! starting my journey today, if everything went okay, I'll be finishing it by december 1st. hope comeback here to say that I had a blast and you made my dream possible. :-)
Paul, great video! As usual. But I cannot agree with one of your arguments that UIKit is an extension skill. It seems to me that nowadays most of the IT companies require a good foundation of UIKit and you can see SwiftUI in the job requirements rarely. SwiftUI is a great framework and we as the developers should pay a lot of attention to it, but yet it is extremely crucial to cover all UIKit basics and more in order to land a job.
@@shazyoutube UIKit will be around for a long time! Many larger companies still use Obj-C. Who do you think will be servicing the currently existing 10's of thousands of apps all built in UIKit? You absolutly need a strong skillset in both if you plan t compete in future job markets. And UIKit if you want a job right now. Maybe for an Indie dev, SwiftUI only might be good advice.
I am so grateful for all the continuous contributions in which Paul Hudson makes… sometimes i feel i dont know if I’m able to break through certain learning barriers but just watching his videos and reading his books give me confidence to become relentless in my thought process and applications in learning swift by understanding the basics and go slow to improve faster and better in the future…Thank you so much :-)
Thanks for taking the time to make this video.
Thanks for this video, Paul!!!
So glad to have come across this video. Put's everything in perspective for an absolute beginner. Thank you Sir!
Thank you, Paul, I will have a job interview in 2 days and I was so worried about what should I know about swift. Now I am relaxed a bit and gonna work more efficiently for my interview.
You're great, your tutorials helped me a lot ^^
An incredible resource for someone getting started. It’s easy to get completely overwhelmed with all of the information and learning paths. Thanks for distilling it down for us!✊🏼
The Stanford CS193p seems to be very popular and often cited the one to start with. What’s your opinion on it?
I am not Paul...but in my experience CS193p is very organized and great course, however, a bit intensive and fast-paced. It could be easier to start with 100 days of SwiftUI.
@@dirrren5770 Thank you Shining, I agree it is a bit intensive. I started it and as soon as the second lesson, generics and MVVM are introduced in the same lesson which is quite challenging.
I love swift since last year June 2021 and did a udemy course for 6 months and stopped because i was interested in machine leanring but after watching your video you're right i shouldn't beat my self up it takes awhile since i started at 0(no background) it might take 1 year thanks for the video its been really helpful
What an absolutely gorgeous doggo, Paul! A thousand kisses and pats!
Thank you for the thorough overview, Paul! I'm transitioning from a web dev role to iOS development bc I love coding with Apple devices/the community. This lays out some stuff I need to explore for sure, will try to start with 100 days of SwiftUI!
Superb overview, packed with practical wisdom & links to valuable resources. Thanks, Paul!!
You explain everything so beautifully that every time I have a problem I go straight to your website and bam! You’ve explained it there. I just want to thank you and say that I appreciate your efforts.
Paul what a great intro. Juan
Where was this video when I was starting? Great video!
You are a hero Paul.
Day 0. Let's Go!!!
The link to slack doesn’t work anymore
I had some experience in python, c, c#, and js before I started learning Swift. I was hired exactly after 3 month of learning it, while getting CS degree.
So at least if u have a bit of tech background it’s totally possible to get a job in 2-3 month, if u have no background I’d like to say 6 month is a more real point where u probably know enough to be a junior dev, 9-12 is when u know enough for sure, and even a bit more.
So good luck and patience for all the beginners here, u can do it 😌
Harder or easier than Java?
Amazing content, just starting my ios learning after 10+ years as a frontend developer.
Which of the courses I never know in order
Thanks Paul. This hit home. I made some objective c apps back in the day but haven't had the motivation to learn swift. Going to start diving in!
Man, u made it! What a nice video fella!!
Excellent presentation thanks. Will check out your book offerings
Thanks Paul, Great advice.
you're fantastic, love your doggo
Thank you Paul! the 100 days of SwiftUI is the best course for iOS I've ever done
Oh my God! You just explained everything and I have been doing it the wrong way.. Thank you so much for letting me know about this things, I am so happy I watched this video.
Sean Allen is a great resource in youtube.
Great video as usual.
This video is amazing, thank you
I just got confused...
So, I'm starting my plans to migrate from QA to iOS Developer.
Should I follow the 100 days with SwiftUI or 100 days with Swift to start this?
What is your recommendation?
I am inspired! Thank you
When I see the title, I said to myself to watch just the first minute as I already have a job as an iOS developer, but Paul put so much effort to this and this is very helpful and informative so I ended watching the whole video.
Thanks Paul!
Thank you so much mate. I really appreciate your help. I was feeling depressed and helpless and I just found your videos and website. Now, I have a hope and more importantly I have found a subject that I love and I can improve myself.
Best of luck - I wish you every success! And don't be too hard to on yourself; learning anything new is tricky at times, and I hope you feel able to reach out for help on Slack, Twitter, the forums, or similar 👍
@@twostraws Thank you very much for your good wishes as well. I'm sure I'll be with you in a while. 😊
Swift is a great language, and iOS is a nice framework. Too bad Xcode is absolutely horrendous and a tiny fraction as enjoyable to work with when compared to VS Code. I wish there was a way I could easily use VS Code to develop iOS apps.
For a job, you recommend SwiftUI over UIKit?
Coming from C++ and Java. And hating JS. Swift and obj c idiosyncrasies have been a warm welcome.
And you have been instrumental in my understanding of the esoteric.
Wish me luck. Need to make money before law school :[
Edit - well received. Took me 3 months and 2 capstones to understand UIKit. (Still *do not * understand UIKit, but I think that that’s thematic to the framework). For comparison, The MERN stack took 1.5 months.
You are so fantastic! In this video I think you shared everything I need to start and anwered all my questions about starting a Swift(UI) job. Thank you!
Hey Paul, It's been a year since you uploaded this video. Do you still stand by the claim you made at 7:37 ?
Yes.
@@twostraws thanks for the reply!
What a brilliant video, I can’t wait to start 100 Days with SwiftUI!
Outstanding advice thank you Paul. From someone who developed their first app using ObC 10 yrs ago and found it VERY painful. Looking forward to using these resources and re-entering iOS dev with swift.
This video was way better than i thought it was going to be. Literally all my questions and doubts answered 👏🏾
Hi, nice video. Can you make a tutorial about the VIP architecture in ios swift for making a small usecase like application onboarding module.
Thank you Paul,
After much confusions and conversations whether to go with famous web development or iOS development
I decided with iOS development.
But still I am sceptical whether it's a good decision or not. Because I am 32, I have no coding experience and wanted to switch from my successful digital marketing career. This video gave me that confidence.
Thank you and I am sticking with iOS. Let's build those apps
excellent video. I wish something like this existed 2 years ago.
everyone says the same. but beginners like me who needs to know something like what are api's, third party libraries, frameworks etc how to use them? i know how to code something using swift or any other language, but i don't know what to do with that code. can you please make a single video which will cover everything a beginner should know. I'm very serious about learning swift but when someone asks me these question i literarily feel demotivated.
yeah every job description wants us to know TDD, CD, UIKit(even though they will probably switch to swiftui soon), mvvm, mvc, system design, plus more. Like how many things does one person need to know?
@@richoffks Topics apart from fading-away UIKit and Middle-to-Senior skill of system design are easily learnable in one week. At least to the level to get junior job
Hi as a beginner, correct me if I'm wrong just want to confirm what i have understand,
I gotta learn first swift first then swift UI? thank you