ShowMe Xcode is the App that you have been waiting for to learn how to Xcode. This is a program for newbies developed by a newbie so I know the problems that all newbies have when starting to Xcode. The tutorials are written so that you can understand what's going on, not just showing the code and letting you figure out what it's supposed to do. All of the tutorials will show you how to create the app programmatically, in Interface Builder or in Storyboard. The code was developed in Xcode 4.2 and will run on iOS versions 4.2 and higher.
Note: alerted that the app crashes running the new iOS 6 operating system. Found and corrected the problem and undergoing more testing to find any further problems. An update will be submitted within a week.
This app includes about a dozen tutorials on how to create base tab bar, table view and navigation controlled projects with variations of each. There will be a separate tutorial in each of the three formats above which will include pictures to help with Interface Builder and Storyboard. There will also be downloadable sample code for each of the tutorials. From there, you can checkout the Index with over 400 entries that you can expand from the base tutorial projects. Of the 400 entries, there are almost 300 working examples with a write-up for each explaining how it works and downloadable sample code in the three formats.
This app has over 400 entries that includes snippets, how-tos and full blown programs. The tab bar examples covers everything from basic tab bars to advanced code like custom buttons, tab bars with animation, raised center and tab re-ordering. The table views covers everything from the basic table views to custom cells, databases using plists, text and csv files as well as a SQLite database. They also include searching, multi-row deletion, drill-downs and much more. Then we have views which cover transitions, animations, all of the control objects, using timers and multimedia. Also included are examples on how to use operations such arc4random, ternary, if statements and loops. It also shows how to use arrays, string formatting and higher level how-tos such as creating gradients and determining NSIndexPaths from a button click. There is so much that it's hard to describe it all in a couple of paragraphs. Click the button on the ShowMe Xcode page to see a list of all the entries in the Index.
This app is jam-packed with more information than you can find anywhere in one place.
Note: alerted that the app crashes running the new iOS 6 operating system. Found and corrected the problem and undergoing more testing to find any further problems. An update will be submitted within a week.
This app includes about a dozen tutorials on how to create base tab bar, table view and navigation controlled projects with variations of each. There will be a separate tutorial in each of the three formats above which will include pictures to help with Interface Builder and Storyboard. There will also be downloadable sample code for each of the tutorials. From there, you can checkout the Index with over 400 entries that you can expand from the base tutorial projects. Of the 400 entries, there are almost 300 working examples with a write-up for each explaining how it works and downloadable sample code in the three formats.
This app has over 400 entries that includes snippets, how-tos and full blown programs. The tab bar examples covers everything from basic tab bars to advanced code like custom buttons, tab bars with animation, raised center and tab re-ordering. The table views covers everything from the basic table views to custom cells, databases using plists, text and csv files as well as a SQLite database. They also include searching, multi-row deletion, drill-downs and much more. Then we have views which cover transitions, animations, all of the control objects, using timers and multimedia. Also included are examples on how to use operations such arc4random, ternary, if statements and loops. It also shows how to use arrays, string formatting and higher level how-tos such as creating gradients and determining NSIndexPaths from a button click. There is so much that it's hard to describe it all in a couple of paragraphs. Click the button on the ShowMe Xcode page to see a list of all the entries in the Index.
This app is jam-packed with more information than you can find anywhere in one place.