
Watch how I actually prompt Claude to translate static Figma mockups into functional SwiftUI layouts without the headache.
Taking the raw AI-generated code and cleaning it up so our signup screen looks sharp.
Tweaking the Discover screen layout. We'll fix those little UI bugs the AI usually leaves behind.
Setting up the core structure for our image generation interface.
Quick crash course on Cursor AI. If you haven't used this editor yet, your coding speed is about to double.
Wiring up the logic. A pretty screen is useless if it doesn't actually do anything when you tap the buttons.
Adding that classic pull-to-refresh feel. Plus, setting up reusable item views.
Exploring native iOS context menus so the app feels like it belongs on an iPhone.
Getting the app to talk to the phone's native storage and camera. This part usually trips people up, but we'll keep it simple.
Setting up the data backbone of our app and making sure our colors don't break in Dark Mode.
We're building a visual graph that actually updates based on real data, not just hardcoded shapes.
Tying our data models directly into the UI so the metrics reflect what's actually happening.
No more blocky screen jumps. We'll add smooth, natural transitions between our views.
Building that first-impression walkthrough screen for our task manager project.
Moving beyond simple taps. We'll start tracking how the user's fingers actually move on the screen.
Hooking up our gestures directly to animations so the UI reacts instantly to the user's touch.
Setting up the architecture. Users love customizing their apps, so we're building theme-switching right in.
Structuring the main dashboard where users will spend most of their time.
Finishing up the dashboard UI and connecting the remaining data points.
The meat of the app. Creating, checking off, and managing the actual to-do list items.
Laying the groundwork for our custom calendar logic. No third-party packages here.
Building a slick, scrollable wheel for selecting specific dates quickly.
Starting the core grid layout for our days and weeks.
Polishing the grid and making sure the math for leap years and weird months actually lines up.
What happens when you tap a day? We're building the slide-up modal to show that day's specific events.
Letting users actually find their stuff. We'll build a fast search system for calendar events.
Handling hours, minutes, and AM/PM logic without pulling your hair out.
Adding advanced multi-touch controls specifically for navigating our complex calendar interface.
Letting users swipe between months and days naturally.
The hardest part—architecting how the Daily, Monthly, and Yearly views talk to each other.
Designing the classic month-at-a-glance view.
Getting that smooth, infinite-feeling scroll between past and future
Tapping a month drills down into the days. Tapping a day drills down into the hours. Here's how we link them.
Zooming all the way out. Building a massive 12-month grid that doesn't lag the phone.
The final piece of the puzzle. Wiring the yearly view directly into the monthly drill-down. You made it!
This course contains the use of artificial intelligence.
The course features high-quality AI-generated voice-over narration, ensuring smooth, clear, and engaging guidance throughout every lesson. The AI voice-over enhances explanations, maintains consistent pacing, and helps you stay focused as you learn complex concepts in a simple, beginner-friendly manner.
Here's something most iOS tutorials won't tell you: the developers shipping polished apps fast right now aren't hand-typing every line of SwiftUI boilerplate from scratch. They're using AI tools intelligently—and it changes everything about how quickly you can actually build something worth showing people.
That's what this iOS SwiftUI development with Claude AI course is about.
We use Claude AI and Cursor to handle the tedious parts—design-to-code translation, boilerplate generation, debugging suggestions—so we can focus on the logic, the architecture, and the UI that actually makes an app feel polished. And I'll be honest: when you see how fast you can move with this workflow, it's a bit shocking. This isn't just a productivity trick. It fundamentally changes what's possible in an afternoon.
And this isn't a 50-hour bootcamp that spends three lectures explaining what a variable is. We jump straight into building real, complex features using iOS SwiftUI development with Claude AI from the very start.
What are we actually building? A Task Manager app—but the real project is a Dynamic Calendar System. If you've ever tried to build a custom calendar in SwiftUI by hand, you know how painful that gets. We build daily, monthly, and yearly views from scratch—custom scrolling logic, event modals, search filters, the whole thing. The kind of project that belongs in a real portfolio.
Along the way, the iOS SwiftUI development with Claude AI training covers Figma-to-SwiftUI translation (honestly saves hours per project), how to prompt Cursor so you actually get usable code back, advanced UI components like photo and document pickers, dynamic progress graphs, and gesture recognizers—tap, drag, pinch—all connected to smooth custom animations.
And we hit bugs. Real ones. I show you exactly how to debug AI-generated code on the fly, which is one of the most useful things in the entire course.
If you have basic coding knowledge and want to see how fast iOS development can actually move today—let's get into it.