Join over 90,000 readers today
Hacking with Swift+ is a subscription service that delivers incredible, hands-on Swift tutorials, so you can deepen your understanding of Swift, SwiftUI, UIKit, and more, and take your career to the next level.
HWS+ costs just $20/month or $200/year, and every article includes 4K Ultra HD video.
Already a subscriber? Log in here
Once you've subscribed for 18 months, you get free online access to over a dozen of my books to expand your learning even further, including:
This means your subscription grows as you do, making Hacking with Swift+ the largest and most comprehensive membership around.
Note: If you're using team licensing with at least three seats, you gain access to this reading library immediately rather than waiting 18 months.
Or start a free trial
filter()
, map()
, and reduce()
.UserDefaults
and Measurement
.PLUS: A huge and growing collection of solutions for challenges in the 100 Days of SwiftUI and elsewhere, a complete archive of HWS+ live streams, access to videos from Hacking with Swift Live 2020 and 2021.
Even more courses are on the way: debugging, testing, and of course lots more SwiftUI – I have an epic collection of tutorials coming, and I can’t wait to share them all with you.
Your Hacking with Swift+ membership gets you every subscriber-only article and video published now and in the future, plus an incredible amount of extras!
Every subscriber gets immediate access to the full range amazing tutorials written for Hacking with Swift+ subscribers, plus the ad-free browsing experience, downloadable projects, monthly live streams, private forum access, and more.
But above and beyond all that you'll also receive exclusive subscriber-only thank you gifts every year – it's the least I can do to show how grateful I am that you're supporting my work.
This has some important terms and conditions, so please read the following carefully!
Start your HWS+ subscription today and start learning immediately, plus get access to the private members forum, enjoy ad-free site browsing, join my monthly live streams, and more.
$20 / month
$200 / year
If you're not sure whether HWS+ is right for you, you can try a free three-day trial – no payment or credit card needed.
To subscribe or start a free trial, please click the button below to sign in to Hacking with Swift.
Create New Account
Or click here to log in with an existing account
Does this subscription give me all your books?
The articles produced for Hacking with Swift+ are all new and exclusive to subscribers, but after subscribing for 18 months you'll also gain free online access to over a dozen of my books. This means your subscription grows as you do, making Hacking with Swift+ the largest and most comprehensive subscription around.
Can I share one account with my whole team?
No, this is not allowed – each member of your team needs their own subscription, just like they would need their own Netflix or Apple Music accounts. If you want your whole team to have a Hacking with Swift+ account, please change the number of licensed seats upwards from 1 when subscribing.
How is a team subscription different from an individual subscription?
When you subscribe with at least three seats, all members of your team gain immediate access to the Hacking with Swift reading library, rather than waiting 18 months – that's over a dozen of my books to maximise your team's learning.
What are the free gifts?
Each year of your subscription we'll mail out free gifts, as a thank you for supporting the site. These include pin metal badges, magnets, stickers, coasters, and more – we think you'll love them! If you take out an annual subscription, we send out your first year's gifts immediately.
What happens in the monthly live streams?
Every Hacking with Swift+ subscriber is invited to join my private monthly live streams on YouTube, where I build a complete app from scratch while answering questions along the way. This is your chance to get involved and explore projects being written live, and these streams are always hugely popular.
What happens if I miss a live stream?
All live streams are recorded, and posted onto the main Hacking with Swift+ site afterwards. Even better, they include a full transcript alongside, so if you prefer text tutorials to video tutorials you have that option.
How do I remove adverts from the site?
Every subscriber can enjoy an ad-free experience on Hacking with Swift – all you need to do is log in, and the site will automatically remove the adverts. To give you the fastest reading experience, we also remove the gray bar under the menu, plus the right-hand bar that sits next to every article.
Is Hacking with Swift+ suitable for absolute beginners?
If you're an absolute beginner you should start with my free 100 Days of SwiftUI course, which teaches you the fundamentals of Swift and SwiftUI. However, Hacking with Swift+ includes complete solutions to all the checkpoints and milestones in the 100 Days of SwiftUI series, making it the perfect companion as you're learning.
What's more, Hacking with Swift+ will grow with you once you've finished learning – it has a wide range of intermediate to advanced Swift techniques and tutorials that will keep pushing your skills further, no matter what your goal.
Some sites claim to have thousands of videos – why is HWS+ better?
Hacking with Swift+ focuses firmly on two things:
How much does it cost?
Hacking with Swift+ costs $20 a month or $200 a year, per seat. Your membership includes all subscriber-only videos and articles available now and published in the future, for as long as your membership remains active. You can cancel your membership at any time, and your access will continue until your term ends.
What's the difference between Monthly and Yearly subscriptions?
Hacking with Swift+ is $20 per month, and you can cancel whenever you want. If you intend to work through many articles and really push your learning forward, you should consider the yearly subscription option, which is $200 for 12 months – a saving of $40.
Both tiers get access to exactly the same high-quality videos, articles, and source code. The only difference is that with the Yearly tier you save $40 every year, making it better value for money.
Are there exercises?
Yes! Many Hacking with Swift+ articles end with challenges to help you take your learning further – code to try, problems to solve, questions to consider, and more.
Why do I need a Hacking with Swift account?
Your Hacking with Swift account links your Gumroad purchase to this site, so we can unlock your subscription. This account also allows you to post to the forums if you want to.
Can I switch from a Monthly to Yearly subscription?
Yes, you can upgrade at any time, and we'll discount the annual subscription based on how much of your monthly subscription remains.
How can I cancel my subscription?
If at any point you want to cancel your Hacking with Swift+ subscription, you can do so directly through your Gumroad account. Your access to the subscriber-only content will remain active until your subscription term ends, at which point it will cease.
Will there be sales tax or VAT added to the price?
If you live in a country or state where tax is applied to digital purchases, that will be added to your subscription price. As you might imagine there isn't a lot I can do about that.
Will you still make free tutorials?
Yes, absolutely! I believe it's important to help everyone learn, so I will still be publishing as many free tutorials as I can. This won't be affected by Hacking with Swift+.
Or start a free trial
UPDATED: Now that we have our basic data model configured and coded, we can put it to use by building a simple user interface to help make sure our data is in place and working correctly.
In part one of this tutorial we looked at how to customize string interpolations on a type-by-type basis, giving you more control over how your code works. In this second part we’ll look at a second powerful use for interpolation: building whole types from scratch.
Swift’s optionals are a real power feature of the language, but without direct compiler support they would be quite onerous. Optional chaining is one part of that support, so be prepared to answer exactly what part it plays.
In this stream we’re going to build a two-player word game where players must make unique words using the same grid – it doesn’t take much to get started, but getting it polished is trickier!
String interpolation is easy, right? Wrong! String interpolation is actually a huge power feature in Swift, and we have a massive array of functionality on hand to help us customize it. In this article I’ll show you just how much control we have, and how to use that control to make your code easier to read.
Now you understand how widgets work, I want to give you a fun and simple task to experiment with. There’s no example solution here because this is just a sandbox for your ideas, but we’ll end up with a fun quiz to test what you learned.
If you don’t already have some experience with this, start getting some now. If you do have some experience, remember to keep your answer pragmatic: there are ups and downs with every approach.
In my book SwiftData by Example we build a complete introductory project with SwiftUI and SwiftData. At the end I lay out three challenges to help you build your skills further, and we'll solve them here – then go on to solve five bonus challenges too!
When it comes to sorting our data, SwiftData has two approaches: the trivial version that works great in a WWDC video and a handful of small projects, and a more complex version that is much more indicative of the kinds of apps you’ll be building in real life.
To kick off the process of cleaning up our code to work well on macOS, we’re going to tackle the easiest one of our views: Awards. This means fixing up its navigation and button styles so it looks and feels great on Mac.
In this part we’re going to look at an example solution to implement matched geometry animations in our Journeys app.
At this point we’ve looked at writing code using async
/await
, using continuations to bridge old code, then optionally using async let
as well. Here we’re going to expand our concurrency knowledge to include tasks and task groups, which provide much more control over our work.
Before we start looking at the data changes this year, there are still more major SwiftUI changes to go over: phase animators and visual effects.
In this article we’re going to look at how easy it is to rebuild the iOS lock screen. Yes, this isn’t hard, but along the way I think you’ll pick up a few cool SwiftUI tricks, including better date formatting, haptic buttons, and more.
Broken record alert: explain the fundamental technical difference between the two, try to provide an opinion on which you think works better, then provide some kinds of examples of where each might work well.
In this article we’re going to build a simple strategy game for iPad, using SwiftUI and SF Symbols. We’ll start out with it being a two-player game, but later on we’ll build a simple AI to make it work just as well as a one-player game.
Now that you’ve had a taste of how async/await code looks, let’s break down what we just saw and examine how asynchronous functions work behind the scenes, and how we can move over to async let
with surprising ease.
This challenge asks you build an app that simulates random dice rolls on behalf the user, adding haptic feedback to bring it to life, and permanent storage for later reference. Let’s tackle it now…
We’re about to start exploring the many SwiftUI changes introduced this year, but before we’re done with concurrency we have two last techniques to explore.
A great answer should introduce property wrappers, then explain what @Published
does, give some examples, compare it against @State
, then bring in any extra real-world knowledge you can add around nuances or complexities.
Link copied to your pasteboard.