@dfreniche@seb_osinski We'd add that tuist offers lots of additional features on top of the project generation. Project generation unlocks us to do so many optimizations whereas xcodegen is focused solely on the project generation 👀
Found this extra @dbrand AirPods Pro while cleaning the studio. Time for another quarantine giveaway!
RT and be following for a chance to win these! I’ll ship anywhere in the world. Winner selected in 24 hours 🙌🏾
@giridharvc7 WWDC is the modern world documentation, why would you need something that clearly states its usage or behavior when you can just watch 1 hour video and miss the part you're interested in
I ❤️ SwiftUI, but as I’ve been using it for the past months, I had to ask myself the question — what would it be like if we had SwiftUI, without the baggage of Swift? 🤔
Introducing my latest open source project: Objective-C UI 🚀
swiftbysundell.com/special/introd…
As I'm preparing lots of my own questions/answers for the MVVM-C posts, do you guys have any specific questions regarding the architecture? I think I covered a lot, but would like to see if there's something I missed?
@krzyzanowskim Hangouts has one great feature for boring meetings though. But only when they're not held in English. Just turn on automatic close captions (which only support English) and laugh your ass off while it tries to interpret people speech.
Personal ranking of video (conferencing) apps, by quality and reliability, based on years of work from home:
1. Zoom
2. FaceTime
3. Skype
4. Messenger
5. Slack video
6. WhatsApp
100. Google Hangouts/Meet/Whatever is today's name
@radexp@FastlaneTools Been there, done that. I once released the app with AppStore video where you could hear some office noises in the background. I forgot to turn off microphone in QuickTime during screen recording from iPhone.
Pro-Tip: Before shipping an app, always make sure to check your @FastlaneTools metadata folder, so that you don't accidentally ship to App Store a two-year-old test screenshot no one was supposed to ever see🤦♂️
So I did a talk about MVVM+C back in 2016, now it's 2020 and I have a lot of tips/architecture decision choices I like to do (with given reasoning of course).
What should I do with these? Currently it's in a big diagram I did in excalidraw but I think blog post might be better?