Book Image

Learn Spring for Android Application Development

By : S. M. Mohi Us Sunnat, Igor Kucherenko
Book Image

Learn Spring for Android Application Development

By: S. M. Mohi Us Sunnat, Igor Kucherenko

Overview of this book

As the new official language for Android, Kotlin is attracting new as well as existing Android developers. As most developers are still working with Java and want to switch to Kotlin, they find a combination of these two appealing. This book addresses this interest by bringing together Spring, a widely used Java SE framework for building enterprise-grade applications, and Kotlin. Learn Spring for Android Application Development will guide you in leveraging some of the powerful modules of the Spring Framework to build lightweight and robust Android apps using Kotlin. You will work with various modules, such as Spring AOP, Dependency Injection, and Inversion of Control, to develop applications with better dependency management. You’ll also explore other modules of the Spring Framework, such as Spring MVC, Spring Boot, and Spring Security. Each chapter has practice exercises at the end for you to assess your learning. By the end of the book, you will be fully equipped to develop Android applications with Spring technologies.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)

Reactive Programming

Reactive programming is an asynchronous approach to event handling. We encounter asynchronous events, such as user interactions with the interface or the delivery of long-term operation results, all the time. There are also libraries, such as RxJava and Reactor, that allow us to write reactive code in Kotlin or Java.

In this chapter, you will learn about the Observer pattern, and how to transform asynchronous events from one type to another. You will also learn how to use the Mono, Single, Observable, and Flux classes that implement the reactive programming concepts.

This chapter will cover the following topics:

  • Reactive programming with Spring Reactor
  • Blocking and non-blocking
  • RxJava
  • RxJava in Android

By the end of this chapter, you will be able to apply reactive programming to your applications, using the RxJava and Reactor libraries.

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