At this point, you should understand how to add SwiftUI views to your app - like text, button, and slider - and how to style them using View Modifiers.
You’ve now completed 5 out of the 9 “must have” items on your programming to do list - you’re making great progress!
Let’s take a look at the 4 that are still remaining:
Show a popup when the user taps “Hit me” button.
Read the value of the slider after the user taps the “Hit me” button.
Generate a random number for the target value.
Calculate and display the score.
The first two on the list are about making the Bull’s Eye interactive. We’d like to make the app display a popup when you tap the “Hit me” button, and we’d like to be able to move the slider, and read it’s value.
And you’ll learn how to do exactly that in the next module, where you’ll learn how to connect your SwiftUI views to data.
So if you’re ready to getting interactive — see you in the next module!
See forum comments
This content was released on Jun 16 2026. The official support period is 6-months
from this date.
In this lesson, you’ll learn where you are with your programming to-do list and discuss what’s next.
Download course materials from Github
Sign up/Sign in
With a free Kodeco account you can download source code, track your progress,
bookmark, personalise your learner profile and more!
Previous: Solve Problems
Next: Quiz: Getting Started with SwiftUI
All videos. All books.
One low price.
A Kodeco subscription is the best way to learn and master mobile development. Learn iOS, Swift, Android, Kotlin, Flutter and Dart development and unlock our massive catalog of 50+ books and 4,000+ videos.