TapCoding Reviews – Page 10

4/5 rating based on 97 reviews. Read all reviews for TapCoding for iPhone.
TapCoding is free iOS app published by Flairify LLC

Amazing app

litttlepeaches

I just started taking a coding class for my major and my professor is really a horrible teacher and it's made me dislike coding. Getting this app made me like it and I actually understand what I'm doing. This app is great!!!


Very clear for starters

Captain sidespin

This is a great way to begin learning to code for anyone with zero experience.


Very good app

NEHP1

Very fun application


Amazing app!! If you have money to spare

#takes too long

Read bottom after this I started with unity, but I was just following instructions, I never learned anything, I didn't know what int or var meant, and got frustrated, and rage quit. But with this app, it gives you instructions, tips, and places to turn to. No in app purchases, no premium, just free help. This is my first day, and I've already learned a lot. 6 stars. Nvm, I got further in, and then you have to pay 6 bucks for the rest of the lessons. 4 stars. Only the first 9 lessons are free. Sorry for the wrong info.


Can't navigate away

Seaweed4

If you navigate away from the lesson to answer a text or something for more than 3 mins, your whole lesson gets reset and you have to restart the lesson over again from scratch. Sometimes I want to work on lessons every time I get on the bus, and I can't complete a whole lesson within that time.


TapCoding is my private tutor!

Thatsmel

I love it. So easy to follow each lesson!


Excellent Swift tutorial but needs improvement

Hervie123

First, the excellent part. In my opinion this is one of the best language tutorials (not just Swift) I've come across. The pace, organization, and clarity of explanations are unmatched. The app gets its name, TapCoding, from the many one-line code snippets the user is asked to fill to cement concepts. These are filled by tapping on keywords chosen from a limited set. It is a much better approach than having to type the lines since the objective is to learn Swift, not typing. It is also what makes the app fun to use. But most of all I am impressed by how Swift is taught: the pace of the tutorial, the clear and logical way the topics are introduced, how the author anticipated my questions as I read along. The only serious objection I have is the app navigation. The app forces you to type code segments in order to advance through lessons. These are major irritants which should be allowed to be skipped. Apparently the developer is addressing this issue, but I’m still waiting ... till then it’s three stars. Enough said. Give this app a spin. You won regret it.