Snapp Technology
Snapp iOS Weekly
Issue 86 April 3, 2026

Hi folks,

This week’s issue highlights major advances in Swift ecosystem tooling, AI-assisted development workflows, and modern SwiftUI techniques.

Swift 6.3 arrives with expanded domain support and improved Package Manager integration, while Xcode 26.4 introduces package traits for better dependency management.

On the productivity front, explore how AI agents can work in parallel to accelerate development, and discover Agent Skills that can reduce Xcode build times from 70 seconds to just 9 seconds (in the example case that we have).

For developers building interactive UIs, we cover infinite scrolling carousels in SwiftUI and examine ViewInspector for testing. Finally, learn how to compose complex parsers elegantly using the swift-parsing library.

We hope you like it!

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Articles

Swift

What’s new in Swift: March 2026 Edition

Owen Voorhees, Dave Lester

Swift 6.3 has been released, expanding Swift into new domains and improving developer ergonomics. This article highlights the integration of Swift Build with Swift Package Manager, bringing a consistent build experience across all platforms. It covers videos about Swift for systems programming, community stories like TelemetryDeck’s Swift adoption, and Swift Evolution proposals including SBOM generation support and improved reduce for noncopyable types.

Package Traits in Xcode

Matt Massicotte

Xcode 26.4 introduces support for package traits, a powerful feature from SwiftPM 6.1 that allows package authors to expose configurable options to their users. This article demonstrates how traits enable optional dependencies and conditional compilation, giving package consumers more control without sacrificing functionality. Matt explains how traits can help us manage transitive dependencies—a common pain point in the Swift package ecosystem.

Composing Parsers with the swift-parsing Library

Mark Szymczyk

This article demonstrates how to build complex parsers by composing smaller, focused ones using the swift-parsing library from Point-Free. The author walks through creating parsers for different parts of a Jujutsu VCS to change output (change ID, author, timestamp, and description) then shows how to combine them into a single parser using the Parse block and map modifiers.

AI/ML

Parallelizing Work with AI

Nicolas Vergoz

An exploration of using AI agents in parallel for development workflows. The author shares their experience prototyping parallel task execution using git worktrees and Claude Code. The takeaways? Upfront preparation is essential (80% preparation, 20% execution), some tasks must run sequentially due to dependencies, and writing specifications for all tasks before implementation helps them adjust to each other as the project evolves.

Xcode Build Optimization using 6 Agent Skills

Antoine van der Lee

Antoine van der Lee introduces a set of open-source Agent Skills for optimizing Xcode build performance. An orchestrator skill coordinates five specialized agents that benchmark builds, analyze settings, and apply optimizations. Early results show impressive improvements: one project reduced incremental build time from 70 seconds to just 9 seconds. The article explains how the skills work, provides usage instructions, and discusses the impact of build times on developer productivity.

UI/UX

Infinite ScrollView in SwiftUI

Artem Mirzabekian

A comprehensive guide to building an infinite scrolling component in SwiftUI. The tutorial covers creating a seamless looping carousel that works in both horizontal and vertical orientations. It teaches us how to adopt techniques like rendering a repeated tail of items, using scroll geometry observers to detect wrap-around points, and preserving velocity during position jumps. The component also supports optional auto-scrolling for decorative use cases like tickers and featured carousels.

ViewInspector for SwiftUI: Weighing the Risks and Benefits

Jon Reid

Jon Reid examines ViewInspector, a third-party library essential for unit testing SwiftUI views. While SwiftUI’s declarative nature makes views difficult to inspect, ViewInspector enables finding subviews, querying attributes, and triggering actions for test verification. The article also addresses concerns about third-party dependencies, noting that maintainer responsiveness and community support make ViewInspector a reliable choice despite occasional compatibility issues with new Xcode releases.