It is easier because SwiftUI was designed to layout your interface using defaults . A paradigm that is akin to getting into a car with an automatic gearbox. UIKit, conversely, is like having a stick shift. It is easier, too, because Apple has worked hard to unify the syntax of many frameworks within SwiftUI.
Read moreHow is SwiftUI different from Swift?
So “SwiftUI” is the thing that draws buttons and stuff, Swift is the language it is written in , and probably the language that a programmer doing a “let’s show a list of flowers, let people tap on them, and see details about them” app uses.
Read moreShould I use Swift or SwiftUI?
The short answer is both. To write SwiftUI apps you must also learn Swift because Swift is the programming language SwiftUI uses .
Read moreShould you use SwiftUI?
In short, SwiftUI is a wonderful and very promising framework. I think it’s the future. But, it could be another 3–5 years until it reaches the same reliability and robustness as UIKit. However, that doesn’t mean you shouldn’t use SwiftUI today .
Read moreShould I start new project with SwiftUI?
But if you want to ship it fast, if targeting 80% of the iOS ecosystem is enough, then you should definitely go with SwiftUI (once you’re comfortable with it). It’s a future proof framework and it’s faster to iterate on your concept, ideas, and design because of the live preview and declarative API.14 Tem 2019
Read moreShould I use SwiftUI production?
This is the future of iOS application development. Period. SwiftUI is ready for production, when the minimum operating system level is iOS 14. Furthermore, as the tool constantly gets more and more updates, there are no reasons not to use SwiftUI in all new application projects .
Read moreHow old is SwiftUI?
Three years ago, at WWDC19, Apple introduced SwiftUI as an alternative to UIKit, the original UI framework, which has been part of the Developer SDK since it released in 2008 .
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