


We're not getting a radical rework of the syntax like we did last year, nor are we getting a breathtaking pile of new features like we did for Swift 2, but there are some nice additions you can use to improve your code. Swift 4 is here, and it's bringing some nice changes. We will show how you can do things the PLRelational Way, and that will give us a baseline to help compare and contrast to existing technologies in a future article. Our goal with this article is to give a big picture look at PLRelational and how it can be used to build an actual application. In this article, we will follow the same process and focus on building out the right-hand side of the application, specifically the detail view. In Part 1 of this article, we used PLRelational to build a portion of a to-do application for macOS. In particular, I want to talk about how it optimizes and executes queries, which is one of the most interesting components of the framework. Today I want to talk about some of its internals. We've been talking a lot about PLRelational lately and what you can do with it. PLRelational: Query Optimization and Execution We are pleased to announce that the team at Primate Labs has taken over sales and development of VoodooPad. We're pleased to announce that the App Center team at Microsoft will be taking over stewardship of PLCrashReporter.
#VOODOOPAD CRASH ARCHIVE#
Archive PLCrashReporter Stewardship Moving to Microsoft
