I started work on the Swift Programming Language (wikipedia) in July of 2010. I implemented much of the basic language structure, with only a few people knowing of its existence. A few other (amazing) people started contributing in earnest late in 2011, and it became a major focus for the Apple Developer Tools group in July 2013.The Swift language is the product of tireless effort from a team of language experts, documentation gurus, compiler optimization ninjas, and an incredibly important internal dogfooding group who provided feedback to help refine and battle-test ideas. Of course, it also greatly benefited from the experiences hard-won by many other languages in the field, drawing ideas from Objective-C, Rust, Haskell, Ruby, Python, C#, CLU, and far too many others to list.
Google more or less forced Apples belated decision simply in making its mobile application developers less miserable than Apples mobile application developers.
Apple launches new Swift blog, offers Xcode 6 beta for freeApple's new Swift programming language has attracted a lot of interest from developers since it was announced last month at WWDC, and now the company is looking to get it in the hands of more developers. Apple launched a new blog specifically for Swift today, and as part of the launch, the company is offering free downloads of the latest Xcode 6 beta to anyone who wants to register for it. The Swift blog will also include "behind-the-scenes" information about Swift from Apple engineers.This is a departure for Apple in a couple of ways - first, Xcode betas have heretofore been available to paying OS X or iOS developers only. The membership is just $99 a year, but it's still a paywall that has separated developers from the general public up until now. Along with the upcoming Yosemite public beta and the Beta Seed program, Apple is offering enthusiasts and developers access to more and more of its software before it's officially ready for public consumption.
Apple's new programming language Swift enters the TIOBE index at position 16. Everybody is curious to know what this new language is about. Especially because it has been developed by Apple. But will Swift remain in the top 20 after its first peak of popularity? Do you remember Google's Go language a couple of years ago? It was a hype as well after its first release and even became programming language of the year in 2009. But as soon as everybody realized that Go was more of the same, it dropped out of the top 100 for some time. Swift seems to be a different story though. The language itself is also nothing new, but in contrast to Go it serves a purpose, i.e. to supersede the outdated Objective-C language. New applications for iPhone and iPad will all be written in Swift eventually. So Swift will probably stay in the top 20 for a long while and has the potential to become a top 10 player.