How Swift.org Blog improves Release Notes on iOS
Showing 9 of 9 articles (Page 1 of 1)
Nick Sloan from Studioworks processed millions in invoices with Swift on the server and saw fewer production bugs than in 20 years of web development. Here's what's happening in the Swift ecosystem this month.
Tim Sneath reflects on Swift's explosive growth: from a simple blog post 10 years ago to 70+ repositories with hundreds of weekly contributors. The language now runs everywhere from Pebble watches to AWS Lambda...
Joe Heck and Dave Lester just dropped the first edition of a new monthly Swift digest, and it's packed with signals that Swift is expanding way beyond iOS. Server-side Swift is heating up with performance gains...
Holly Borla from Apple's Swift Core Team just dropped Swift 6.2, and it's tackling the biggest pain point in modern development: making concurrent programming actually approachable. This isn't just another incr...
Holly Borla from Apple's Swift Core Team announces Swift 6, bringing data-race safety from opt-in warnings to compiler-enforced guarantees. After a decade of development, Swift now targets embedded systems, ser...
Swift just got a massive upgrade. Feli Bernutz, Matthaus Woolard, and Natalia Panferova break down the Swift 5.6 and 5.7 releases that are reshaping how iOS teams write concurrent, type-safe code.
Ted Kremenek from Apple's Swift Core Team just dropped Swift 5.5, and it's the biggest language update in years. This release fundamentally changes how iOS developers write concurrent code.
Ted Kremenek from Apple's Swift Core Team just dropped Swift 5.4, and it's packed with performance wins that'll make your builds faster and your runtime leaner. This isn't just new syntax—it's measurable speed ...
Holly Borla announces Swift 5.3 with performance gains that cut code size by 40% in some apps and slash heap memory to under 1/3 of previous usage. These aren't incremental improvements.