
Digest MBLT DEV is a weekly selection of news from the world of iOS development. Every Friday we deliver useful materials directly to the post office with comments from top iOS developers. Already 200 issues = 200 weeks.
The first number of the digest released by the e-Legion team in 2015. Since then, new rubrics and authors have appeared, and the number of subscribers is growing every week. If you still do not read our iOS digest, then we sincerely do not understand why. It's time to fix it.

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Gift from Dear Editors and SkyengWe decided to please our most loyal subscribers and figured out 6 people who first subscribed to the digest and continue to read each issue so far. A gift is sent to them in the mail - 4 individual lessons from Skyeng. The rest of our readers will be able to get two free classes on the promotional code
mbltdev1 when purchasing the first lesson.
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Bundles and packagesSo that you no longer confuse the concept of "bundle" and "package", Mat wrote an article about what is what and what is the difference between them.
nshipster.comAnalyzing ComplexityAn instructive story about how to turn on the head, analyze the existing solution and improve performance when working with collections using a specific example.
khanlou.comAvoiding Callback Hell in SwiftSimple tips for getting rid of “spaghetti code” by using guard, promises, OperationQueue, or Swift's ability to pass functions as arguments.
swiftrocks.comAdvanced UIView shadow effects using shadowPathGuide to creating shadows and the effect of the shadowPath parameter on the final result.
www.hackingwithswift.comSlot-based UI development in SwiftShould an interface be designed to create elements that can adapt to different data and display conditions, or is it better to create a specially sharpened type for each case? The author suggests using a balanced approach that takes the best from these implementations.
www.swiftbysundell.comHow to create a custom gauge control using UIKitStep-by-step creation of a new UI element in the form of a circular scale.
www.hackingwithswift.comUnbreakable reference cycles in SwiftThe difficulties arising from the use of closures and structures that lead to memory leaks are described.
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