Initial Light Mode Recovery Phrase Backup Screen
Dark mode color adjustments
Quotes "Navigation Bar Title"
Fix Recovery Phrase chips throw a UI Thread warning
Integrate Copy to buffer button
create test build 4 for UX validation
FIX: Archiving compilation errors
fix warnings. add TODOs for demo code that is needed to build on release mode
PR Fixes: remove dump calles add TODOs
remove unneeded padding
remove prints
PR fixes: remove min height from standard button style.
change extension from View to Text
change comment format
PR Fixes. code style
Add ticket number to TODOs
Rename "Backup Flow" to BackupFlow
PR lint fixes
Add tests
Fix lint issue. cleanup
rename "UI Components" to "UIComponents"
Renamed folder with spaces to CamelCase names:
"App Errors" to "AppErrors"
"Mocked Dependencies" to "MockedDependencies"
Renamed "Font Styles" to "FontStyles"
hook up to home screen
Adding: [Suggestion(adding pasteboard to environment)]
Implement [Suggestion(use specific RecoveryPhraseError) | non-blocking]
Remove double carriage return and replace by VStack of Text()
add App Uses Non-Exempt Encryption -> NO value to Info.plist
bump build #
0.0.1-7
make view modifiers private
move modifiers into extension
Testable Pasteboard
Fix: Word groups don't have noticeable spacing that allows the user to tell them apert
FIX: don't truncate enumerated chips
This is a way to add back some of the "free" animations that we lose when
creating custom bindings instead of using `@State` variables, which is
extremely common in TCA / unidirectional architecture.
For an example check out the live preview in the `WithStateBinding` file.
The first is with a standard State binding, click to get the detail and then
drag from the leading edge slowly. You will notice the selection highlight _gradually_
gets less the more you drag (or stronger if you go back).
For the second one with a custom binding, drag back and you will notice it is either
entirely selected, or deselected.
The third uses `WithStateBinding` to give _back_ the nice animations to custom bindings.
This gives us a more readable approach to set up navigation links
that mirrors other `SwiftUI` navigation paradigms such as `.sheet`.
We use the modifier to simplify navigation link setup for `TransactionHistoryView`
We also include some `Binding` extensions to help creating them.
This adds a "TCA" feature of a (very) basic transaction history and detail.
It demonstrates a purely state driven navigation stack.
Specifically, a `route: Route?` value is tracked in the state.
This value is driven by the selection of a transaction in the list,
setting it to to `.selectedTransaction(transaction)`,
which then pushes the detail view for that `transaction` onto the `NavigationView`.
Popping the detail view sets the property to `nil`.
Take a look at the previews in `TransactionHistoryView` try them "live" as well.
**N.B** The models are _not_ correct in any way, though are meant to be somewhat representative
and give something to display.