iPhone Programming: The Big Nerd Ranch Guide (Big Nerd Ranch Guides)
Based on Big Nerd Ranch’s popular iPhone Bootcamp class, iPhone Programming: The Big Nerd Ranch Guide leads you through the essential tools and techniques for developing applications for the iPhone, iPad, and iPod Touch. In each chapter, you will learn programming concepts and apply them immediately as you build an application or enhance one from a previous chapter. These applications have been carefully designed and tested to teach the associated concepts and to provide practice working with the standard development tools Xcode, Interface Builder, and Instruments. The guide’s learn-while-doing approach delivers the practical knowledge and experience you need to design and build real-world applications. Here are some of the topics covered:
- Dynamic interfaces with animation
- Using the camera and photo library
- User location and mapping services
- Accessing accelerometer data
- Handling multi-touch gestures
- Navigation and tabbed applications
- Tables and creating custom rows
- Multiple ways of storing and loading data: archiving, Core Data, SQLite
- Communicating with web services
- ALocalization/Internationalization
“After many ‘false starts’ with other iPhone development books, these clear and concise tutorials made the concepts gel for me. This book is a definite must have for any budding iPhone developer.” –Peter Watling, New Zealand, Developer of BubbleWrap
List Price: $ 49.99
Price: $ 22.69


Top of the Heap,
If you plan on picking up a book about iPhone programming, you’ve found the right one.
I have a *ton* of iPhone books (and programming books, in general), and this sits at the top of the heap. The book is easy to read and understand, and the code provided is reusable (bonus!). It’s obvious the material is derived from an experienced team.
Ultimately I’ve found that I can “trust” the problems/solutions laid out in the book, since it’s coming from The Big Nerd Ranch (search for it if you’re not familiar).
5+ stars.
My 3 book recommendation for iPhone:
1) iPhone Programming (this book)
2) Programming in Objective-C (Kochan)
3) Cocoa Design Patterns (Buck, Yacktman)
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|One of the best programming books I’ve ever read,
I move from software technologies almost yearly, starting with PHP to ASP.NET and now starting iPhone development, so each year is basically another library of books I have to buy to teach myself the language. I’ve read a ridiculous amount of computer books, ranging from the terrible (super boring, dense) to the insultingly easy ones (that basically treat you like a 4th grader learning programming.)
This, thankfully, is a fantastic mix of being incredibly easy to pick up and read, and also super informative. As far as iPhone development goes, this will be my 4th introductory book I’ve picked up, trying to get a handle on developing for the platform. The other books all typically tend to throw you into immediately coding, and never really actually explain why you’re doing what you’re doing, or make sense of any of it. Yes, this book does start off with an example chapter that you basically just copy word for word, but that’s mostly to get your feet wet before actually digging through all the details and building your foundation.
In the first 3-4 chapters of this book, I already feel like I have a complete grasp on subjects that I did not yet understand from the 3 previous books I’ve read. I sort of had an idea why I typed ‘*’ in front of names, or what @property (retain) statements meant, but I never fully understood what I was doing–it was mostly just “well, I read it, so it must be the way to do it.” Basically, the other books got me about 75-80% there, but this one is 100%. The last 20 I feel is the most important, because that’s when you finally begin to understand the concepts of the language, which let you move onto the more complex stuff with confidence.
Another reason I feel this makes a great coding book is the layout of each page. I can’t tell you how important it is to present all that text + code in a meaningful, organized way. I’ve read some books where they just hit you over the head with instructions, with almost no visual clues and with fragmented code samples. But the pages in this book have plenty of white space per page, have plenty of illustrations and each code sample is commented (an appropriate amount) to give you hints as you’re typing code as to what you’re doing.
Finally, and thank goodness for this, the first example in this book that you write is NOT a Hello, World app
In summation, if you’re like me and have started to read a few books (or maybe you haven’t, I wish I could have started with this one) and are looking for a way to really feel confident with iPhone core concepts, then pick this book up and give it a read. I can’t wait to get started on the many project ideas I have!
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|Love it. I can’t stop reading it,
I love this book. I like the style and honesty of the author. Go right to the point. Is not boring. This is my 3rd iPhone Programming book. I love Jeff LaMarche too (It is also, a great intro to iPhone development). But, I think this one is less cluttered. I got the book yesterday (April 20, 2010). In two hours I read up to chapter 4 (I liked chapter 3 – Memory Management). Good introduction. The combination of XCode screen shots and UML charts are excellent complements to the text. I recommend this book (and Kochan, Objective-C programing book, latest edition) to anyone who wants learn how to program the iPhone. It is sad, that they don’t have a chapter on OpenGL-ES, but it looks like the authors are planning to put together a book alone on this subject. I can’t wait!. IMHO, Mr. Hillegas and his group, have (or has) mastered the art of communicating knowledge to the masses.
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