ππΌ Welcome to SwiftlyRush
SwiftLeeds is getting closer and closer.
It's super fascinating to run a conference because the planning never stops, from January to October, we're always planning, making changes or doing various elements involved in running a conference, like the logistical side with the venue or looking at CFP for the speakers.
However, once we get to July, the plans start ramping up as we announce the majority of our speakers, and then we really start planning what each day is going to look like, this year is particularly special because we're moving to a 2-day conference which means double the amount of fun!
Tickets have sold at record speed this year, we're running at around 60% full capacity already and we have months left to go, we're also signing up a couple more sponsors so that this year will be exciting!
If you've not purchased your ticket yet and are considering joining us, you might want to snap them up now: https://swiftleeds.co.uk
Have a great week ahead π«ΆπΌ
π₯ Community News
Mastering charts in SwiftUI. Selection by Majid
Swift Charts provides a lovely API allowing you to tune charts and add custom interactions within a few lines of code. The following framework iteration goes further and allows us to track chart selection in a single line of code. This week we will learn about new APIs allowing us to handle selection in Swift Charts.
OSLog and Unified logging as recommended by Apple by Antoine var der Lee
Create structured logging using OSLog and benefit from Xcode's debugging console using filters and colored logs.
Simplifying Swift Timers: solving memory leaks & complexity once and for all by Oleg Dreyman
This is a great article by Oleg going through Swift Timers, and what issues you might face and how to resolve those, Timers can sometimes be awkward especially when it comes to memory management.
Observation Framework in iOS 17 by Sarun
In iOS 17, Apple introduced a new and simpler way to make a view response to data changes.
SwiftUI onChange Deprecation by Keith Harrison
Apple made changes to the SwiftUI onChange handler in iOS 17 and Keith has written a small but to the point article explaining those changes.
The Compound Effect by Manuel Herrera
The Compound Effect is a book that Manuel is covering his thoughts on reading, I love articles like this whereby people write up there thoughts after reading a book, I think it offers a very different perspective and also offer you a chance to decide if you'd like to read it or not. In this case, I would love to read this particular book.
π‘ And Finally...
What's Josh Holtz up to π