Expert guidance, battle-tested open source tools, advanced AI skills, exclusive videos, and a community of likeminded engineers.
Expert-crafted AI skill documents for building long-lasting Swift applications.
Design, test, and evolve applications using the same principles, libraries, and techniques we use every day at Point‑Free.

We show off some superpowers unlocked by embracing isolation, noncopyable, and nonescapable types by showing how they can be used to add incredible safety and performance to a legacy C API, and we will bring everything together to see how these tools make testing an app that uses Composable Architecture 2.0 and SQLiteData like magic.

It’s time to go beyond the basics with a deep exploration of isolation, noncopyable, and nonescapable types. But before we get into all the nitty gritty details we will demonstrate why understanding these topics matters, starting with a preview of isolation in Composable Architecture 2.0.

We celebrate 8 years of Point-Free with a live stream! We take our brand new “Point-Free Way” skill documents for a spin by building a Flashcards app powered by SQLiteData, and we give a sneak peek at “Composable Architecture 2.0,” a reimagining of our popular library.

We dissect some of the most important and interesting topics in Swift programming frequently, and deliver them straight to your inbox.

We cover both abstract ideas and practical concepts you can start using in your code base immediately.

Download a fully-functioning Swift playground from the video so you can experiment with the concepts discussed.

We transcribe each video by hand so you can search and reference easily. Click on a timestamp to jump directly to that point in the video.
SQLite is one of the most well-crafted, battle-tested, widely-deployed pieces of software in history, and it’s a great fit for apps with more complex persistence needs than user defaults or a JSON file. This collection serves as an introduction to the basics of SQLite, as well as an exploration into more advanced topics and techniques for integrating SQLite into your applications.
Swift has many tools for concurrency, including threads, operation queues, dispatch queues, Combine and now first class tools built directly into the language. We start from the beginning to understand what the past tools excelled at and where they faultered in order to see why the new tools are so incredible.
SwiftUI may be all the rage these days, but that doesn’t mean you won’t occassionally need to dip your toes into the UIKit waters. Whether it be to access some functionality not yet available in SwiftUI, or for performance reasons (UICollectionView 😍), you will eventually find yourself subclassing UIViewController, and then the question becomes: what is the most modern way to do this?
If you have ever created a binding using the get:set: initializer, you may want to reconsider. Doing so can hurt SwiftUI’s ability to animate your view. Luckily there is a better way. You can leverage @dynamicMemberLookup and subscripts to derive new bindings in a way that allows SwiftUI to propertly track where the binding came from.
SwiftData is not capable of filtering and sorting by raw representable enum properties in models. Predicates and sort descriptors will compile just fine when referencing enum properties, but it will crash at runtime.
SwiftData is not capable of sorting by boolean properties in models. And if you try to trick SwiftData to allow it, you will encounter runtime crashes.

Thanks @mbrandonw @stephencelis for the very pedagogical series with @pointfreeco Excited and looking forward to learn from the series

Every episode has been amazing on Pointfree, yet somehow, you've managed to make these Parser combinator episodes even better!!! ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

Their content pushes the boundary of my knowledge, and it's fun to watch!

tfw you are excited for a 4 hour train ride because you'll have time to watch the new @pointfreeco episode 🤓🏔🚂 #MathInTheAlps #typehype

Three recent @pointfreeco episodes were so interesting I stayed in the treadmill 3x as long as usual and watched them all in a row! Walking may be challenging later/tomorrow... 😮

@pointfreeco ❤️: Thank you! 🧠: … The brain can’t say anything. It is blown away (🤯)!

My new favourite morning routine is feeding 👶🏻 while watching @pointfreeco

Due to the amount of discussions that reference @pointfreeco, we added their logo as an emoji in our slack.

We have this thing called WWTV at #PlanGrid where we mostly just listen to @mbrandonw and @stephencelis talk about functions.
Our free plan includes 1 members only episode of your choice, access to 75 free episodes with transcripts and code samples, and weekly updates from our newsletter.