try! Swift Tokyo 2016 - Boundaries in Practice

Conference: try! Swift Tokyo 2016

Year: 2016

try! Swift Tokyo Conference 2016 - try! Swift is an immersive community gathering about Apple Technologies, Swift Language Best Practices, Application Development in Swift, Server-Side Swift, Open Source Swift, and the Swift Community in Tokyo! Topic - Boundaries in Practice Speaker - Ayaka Nonaka Twitter - https://www.twitter.com/ayanonagon Bio - Ayaka leads the iOS team at Venmo, where they write only Swift these days. She’s been doing iOS development since iOS 4 and loves writing Swift while listening to Taylor Swift. In the past, she’s given talks on NLP in Swift, Swift Scripting, and rewriting the Venmo app in Swift. She was born in Tokyo and was super excited to give her first talk there! 宜しくお願いします。 Abstract - One of the talks that Ayaka enjoyed watching is Boundaries by Gary Bernhardt. If you’ve seen a talk about functional programming in Swift, you’ve probably heard it being referenced. When she first watched the talk a few years ago, she understood the theory but wasn’t sure where exactly to apply the concepts. As she has been writing more Swift, she started to see that the concept of “Functional Core, Imperative Shell” applies not just to functional programming, but also to good engineering in general. In this talk, we’ll go over a couple of specific examples how these “boundaries” can help us write better, safer, and more future-proof Swift code. You don’t need to watch the Boundaries talk to understand this talk, but if you have time, definitely watch it because it’s a great talk. Presentation Link - https://speakerdeck.com/ayanonagon/shi-jian-de-boundaries try! Swift Tokyo Twitter - https://twitter.com/tryswiftconf try! Swift Tokyo Twitter Hashtag - https://twitter.com/hashtag/tryswiftconf try! Swift Website - https://www.tryswift.co/ try! Swift Conference Photos - https://www.flickr.com/photos/tryswift/albums try! Swift Conference Contact - info@tryswift.co try! Swift Conference © 2018 - Powered by NatashaTheRobot