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Episode 15

Mini mini M1ni

00:00:00
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00:48:49

November 16th, 2020

48 mins 49 secs

Season 1

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About this Episode

Welcome to Code Completion, Episode 15! We are a group of iOS developers and educators hoping to share what we love most about development, Apple technology, and completing your code on this brand new show!

Follow us @CodeCompletion on Twitter to hear about our upcoming livestreams, videos, and other content.

Today, we discuss:

  • The iPhones, especially the desires around a perfect iPhone mini
  • The M1 processor

Also, join us for #CompleteTheCode and Compiler Error, two segments that test both your knowledge and our knowledge on Swift, Apple, and all things development!

Your hosts for this week: {{ remove those not present }}

Be sure to also sign up to our monthly newsletter, where we will recap the topics we discussed, reveal the answers to #CompleteTheCode, and share even more things we learned in between episodes.

You are what makes this show possible, so please be sure to share this with your friends and family who are also interested in any part of the app development process.

Sponsor

This week's episode of Code Completion is brought to you by Mystiko. Search for Mystiko on the iMessage App Store today to give it a try.

Complete the Code

Be sure to tweet us with hashtag #CompleteTheCode if you know the answer!

Compiler Error

1 - Hoping to improve Javascript, Objective-J was invented as a way of bringing Objective-C’s class and message sending syntax and more over to web development, but without the *’s.
2 - Objective-C++ is a variant of Objective-C that adds the same extensions to C++ as it does to C, effectively duplicating the implementations of classes, exception handling, and closures.
3 - Objective-C# is another variant of Objective-C started in 2009 after the success of the iPhone hoping to bring dynamic dispatch to C#, but was not actively maintained.
4 - Inspired by an off-hand remark, Objective-Rust is a toy language recently developed that adds some Objective-C syntax to Rust, for better interoperability between the two languages.