Top-notch video tutorials for Swift developers

Thousands of developers use NSScreencast to stay on top of iOS development.

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Updated Regularly

Bite-sized videos on iOS development.

The iOS landscape is large and changes often. With short, bite-sized videos released on a steady schedule, NSScreencast helps keep you continually up to date.

Up to date with Xcode 15 and iOS 17

We cover the latest and greatest to get you up to speed quickly.

UIKit, SwiftUI, SwiftData, and macOS

In our catalog you'll find a wide variety of topics and UI frameworks.

Swift Language

Increase your knowledge of the Swift language and take advantage of new Swift language features as they are developed.

High Quality Videos

We stress the details. Each screencast is carefully produced in HD quality.

Short and Focused

We don't want to waste your time. Most videos are between 10 and 20 minutes long.

Any Device

Stream on the web or use our native apps for iOS or the tv.

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Steven Tolton

Have I mentioned lately how awesome NSScreencast is? No? Worth the subscription. Check it out if you’re an iOS developer. Or even if you’re not and you want an example of how to do coding screencasts well.

Foster Bass

Got tired of dead-end googling so I checked to see if @NSScreencast had covered what I was looking for. Of course he had, 4 years ago. Should have checked there first.

Aijaz Ansari

One 13-minute episode of @NSScreencast just paid for the yearly subscription fee in amount of time saved. Do it.

Sam Soffes

Seriously great stuff even for seasoned developers. I’ve learned a good amount from Ben’s videos.

James Dempsey

You can really expand your development horizons in just a few minutes a week with NSScreencast.

Alexis Gallagher

Random PSA for iOS developers: @NSScreencast is a great resource, and worth every penny. It’s high quality, practical, and honest.

Nate Armstrong

Can’t say enough good things about @NSScreencast There is gold in the Road Trip DJ Series.

Karl Oscar Weber

I just reuppped my subscription to @NSScreencast. [An] indespensible resource if you’re into iOS or Mac Development.

Marcus Ziadé

Just finished @NSScreencast series on Modern CollectionViews. Strongly recommended. Programmatic UI, nicely structured code, easily approachable explanation style. 👌

Showing episodes 49 - 72 of 581 in total
  • Derived Bindings in SwiftUI

    #533

    Bindings are a core concept in SwiftUI. We can easily convert a @State property wrapper to a binding of its value, and we can traverse keypaths to get Bindings of nested values. What if we wanted to transform the values, or update values inside of collections? In this episode we will explore creating map for transforming bindings, unwrap for transforming optional bindings, and take a look at how bindings with collections work under the hood.

  • Property Wrappers - Accessing the Enclosing Instance

    #532

    Property Wrappers are great for encapsulating cross-cutting concerns and simplifying common patterns. However, previously it seemed impossible to access the enclosing instance to enable more advanced and useful behaviors. As it turns out, this was supported all along, just in a not-so-obvious way. Let me show you.

  • SwiftUI Escape Hatch

    #531

    Sometimes we run into issues where SwiftUI doesn't quite do what we need. In some cases, SwiftUI views are powered by UIKit under the hood. Wouldn't it be great (and devious) to dig into the underlying UIKit views to customize things when vanilla SwiftUI just won't cut it? In this episode we'll look at a technique for discovering the UIKit underneath SwiftUI views.

  • FocusedValue and FocusedBinding

    #530

    In this episode we will examine FocusedValue and FocusedBinding, which are property wrappers that allow you to react to some state when a nearby field gets focused.

  • Controlling Focus in SwiftUI

    #529

    There are a number of types, propertyWrappers and view modifiers describing "focus" so it is not immediately obvious what they are all for. In this episode we will see how we can control focus for a text field in SwiftUI. We'll see how to use simple Bools as well as your own types to describe which field has focus. Finally we'll touch on a common request that doesn't yet have a great answer: setting focus in onAppear.

  • How to get logs from your app using OSLogStore

    #528

    In iOS 15 we can take advantage of the long-awaited OSLogStore, which allows you to capture and filter logs for your process on device. In this episode we will examine the NSScreencast application, which utilizes logging pretty extensively. We will build a rudimentary debug shake menu to show recent logs.

  • From os_log to Logger

    #527

    iOS 14 brought some nice improvements to os_log via a new type called Logger. This leverages Swift's StringInterpolation type to make it much more usable for formatting values inside your logs. It does this without sacrificing the privacy and performance that makes os_log so appealing. In this episode we will see how we can adopt this new API as well as how StringInterpolation works under the hood.

  • Hot Reloading with Inject

    #526

    One of the most impactful things you can do to improve productivity is to improve turnaround time when iterating on features. Playgrounds and Xcode Live Previews are great, but both have their limitations. In this episode we will explore how to utilize hot module reloading to have the simulator automatically reflect your changes when you save. It's magic, and will blow your mind!

  • Wurdle Part 7 - Final Touches

    #525

    Building a Wordle Clone in SwiftUI

    We now have all the pieces in place to make this game playable. We'll choose a random word, and then move on to detecting won/lost games and provide the ability to restart and keep playing.

  • Wurdle Part 6 - Letter Flip

    #524

    Building a Wordle Clone in SwiftUI

    In this episode we create a custom transition using a GeometryEffect to add a nice flip animation for the letters as they are revealed.

  • Wurdle Part 5 - Coloring the Letters

    #523

    Building a Wordle Clone in SwiftUI

    Now that we have some information associated with each of our typed characters, we can use that to color each letter according to its status.

  • Wurdle Part 4 - Enriching the model

    #522

    Building a Wordle Clone in SwiftUI

    This time we'll focus on moving on from a simple string to a data structure that can capture the status of each guessed letter.

  • Wurdle Part 3 - Handling guesses and the enter key

    #521

    Building a Wordle Clone in SwiftUI

    In this episode we will handle the enter key and migrate our state to contain an array of guesses. We will then refactor to an observable object to better encapsulate state changes and to enable testability.

  • Typed Letter Animation

    #520

    Building a Wordle Clone in SwiftUI

    Let's make the letters bounce a little as they are being typed. To do this we'll have to see how animated state changes are performed and how we can restructure our view hierarchy to achieve the results we're after.

  • Wurdle Part 1 - Letter Grid and Text Input

    #519

    Building a Wordle Clone in SwiftUI

    In this episode we'll design a letter grid and build up text input using a hidden textfield, displaying the typed letters in our own UI.

  • Creating an Actor-based Image Cache

    #518

    Async / Await

    In this episode we create an image cache using an actor that provides disk-caching for images from the Unsplash API. We'll also talk about Sendable and enable some compiler warnings to help us catch potential issues.

  • Async Streams

    #517

    Async / Await

    In this episode we will look at two ways of generating async values with AsyncStream. We'll examine the difference between the push and pull models and how to deal with back pressure.

  • Type Erased Async Sequences

    #516

    Async / Await

    We explore how we might encapsulate logic within an AsyncSequence and introduce the need for a type erased version. Type-erasure has some pros and cons and in this video we will explore how to create one called AnyAsyncSequence and how we can use it.

  • AsyncSequence

    #515

    Async / Await

    In this episode we will see how to create and use our own AsyncSequence, which allow us to iterate over values that can arrive asynchronously. We'll see how this compares to traditional sequences and how to make use of AsyncIterator to build our own AsyncSequence implementations.

  • Tasks, Groups, and Cancellation

    #514

    Async / Await

    The unit of work in Swift Concurrency is the Task. In this episode we will see how tasks are created and structured, how to run work in parallel, and how to handle cancellation by aborting work or returning partial results.

  • Actors

    #513

    Async / Await

    Actors are a new first class concept in swift. In this episode we will explore the problem they solve and how to use them to avoid race conditions which can lead to inconsistent results or even crashes.

  • Adapting Delegate Callbacks to Async Await

    #512

    Async / Await

    Continuations are great for adapting completion-handler APIs to the new async await world. But what about delegate callbacks, which happen in an entirely separate method? In this episode we will adapt 2 delegate APIs into async await to see how this works.

  • Adapting existing asynchronous APIs with Continuations

    #511

    Async / Await

    With Continuations we can bridge the non-async world and make it async. Continuations allow us to take the result of a completion block and turn it into an async flow. In this episode we will see the difference between checked and unchecked continuations as well as their throwing variants.

  • Async Networking

    #510

    Async / Await

    In this episode we will see how URLSession can be used with async await. With this new API you can easily send network request and await a tuple of both the data and the response object.