Book Image

Android UI Development with Jetpack Compose

By : Thomas Künneth
Book Image

Android UI Development with Jetpack Compose

By: Thomas Künneth

Overview of this book

Jetpack Compose is Android’s new framework for building fast, beautiful, and reliable native user interfaces. It simplifies and significantly accelerates UI development on Android using the declarative approach. This book will help developers to get hands-on with Jetpack Compose and adopt a modern way of building Android applications. The book is not an introduction to Android development, but it will build on your knowledge of how Android apps are developed. Complete with hands-on examples, this easy-to-follow guide will get you up to speed with the fundamentals of Jetpack Compose such as state hoisting, unidirectional data flow, and composition over inheritance and help you build your own Android apps using Compose. You'll also cover concepts such as testing, animation, and interoperability with the existing Android UI toolkit. By the end of the book, you'll be able to write your own Android apps using Jetpack Compose.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
1
Part 1:Fundamentals of Jetpack Compose
5
Part 2:Building User Interfaces
10
Part 3:Advanced Topics

Examining architectural aspects

In the Component hierarchies section, I showed you that component-based UI frameworks rely on specialization. General features and concepts are implemented in the root component or one of its immediate successors. Such general features include the following:

  • Location and size on screen
  • Basic visual aspects like background (color)
  • Simple user interactions (reacting to clicks)

Any component will provide these features, either in a specialized way or in its basic implementation. Android's view system is class-based, so changing functionality is done by overriding the methods of the parent.

Composable functions, on the other hand, do not have a shared set of properties. By annotating a function with @Composable, we make certain parts of Jetpack Compose aware of it. But besides not specifying a return type, composables seem to have few things in common. However, this would have been a pretty short-sighted architectural decision...