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posted by martyb on Tuesday June 03 2014, @04:54PM   Printer-friendly
from the swift-language-but-not-so-swift-name dept.

Apple surprised the audience at its Worldwide Developers Conference in San Francisco on Monday with a tool that few attendees expected: a new programming language for iOS and OS X development called Swift (https://developer.apple.com/swift/). There already is a programming language called Swift (http://swift-lang.org/main/) that was developed by the National Science Foundation, some other government agencies, and the University of Chicago for use in parallel computing applications. This isn't that. What it is, is an entirely new syntax that -- in the words of Apple senior VP Craig Federighi, who unveiled it during the Monday morning WWDC keynote -- aims to be "Objective-C without the baggage of C."

Some of that "baggage" will already be familiar to developers who cut their teeth on C but later moved on to scripting languages such as Python (and Federighi compared Swift to Python several times during his presentation). Like scripting languages but unlike C, Swift lets you get straight to the point. The single line println("Hello, world") is a complete program in Swift. Note, also, that you don't even have to end the statement with a semicolon, as you do in C. Those are optional, unless you're combining multiple statements on a single line; i.e. a semi-colon is a statement separator rather than a statement terminator.

In addition to its online documentation, Apple has released an e-book, The Swift Programming Language, that's a free download (https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/the-swift-programming-language/id881256329) from the iBooks Store. To start working with the language itself, you'll need to download the beta release of XCode 6 (https://developer.apple.com/xcode/downloads/), which includes tutorials to get you going.

 
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  • (Score: 2) by NCommander on Tuesday June 03 2014, @06:34PM

    by NCommander (2) Subscriber Badge <michael@casadevall.pro> on Tuesday June 03 2014, @06:34PM (#50728) Homepage Journal

    Holy eyebleed. I haven't had a chance to look at the Shift pages yet, but this feels like if C and Forth had freaking baby with a bit of Python thrown in.

    I don't mind odd syntaxs (I actually don't even mind worth with forth either), but thats just ... *ow*.

    Seriously, I know a fair number of people dislike ObjC (its syntax is kinda wonky), but it works well, and intergrates nicely with basically every existing C and C++ codebase in existence. How the heck does this actually improve anything?!

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