Book Image

Kickstart Modern Android Development with Jetpack and Kotlin

By : Catalin Ghita
5 (1)
Book Image

Kickstart Modern Android Development with Jetpack and Kotlin

5 (1)
By: Catalin Ghita

Overview of this book

With Jetpack libraries, you can build and design high-quality, robust Android apps that have an improved architecture and work consistently across different versions and devices. This book will help you understand how Jetpack allows developers to follow best practices and architectural patterns when building Android apps while also eliminating boilerplate code. Developers working with Android and Kotlin will be able to put their knowledge to work with this condensed practical guide to building apps with the most popular Jetpack libraries, including Jetpack Compose, ViewModel, Hilt, Room, Paging, Lifecycle, and Navigation. You'll get to grips with relevant libraries and architectural patterns, including popular libraries in the Android ecosystem such as Retrofit, Coroutines, and Flow while building modern applications with real-world data. By the end of this Android app development book, you'll have learned how to leverage Jetpack libraries and your knowledge of architectural concepts for building, designing, and testing robust Android applications for various use cases.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
1
Part 1: Exploring the Core Jetpack Suite and Other Libraries
7
Part 2: A Guide to Clean Application Architecture with Jetpack Libraries
13
Part 3: Diving into Other Jetpack Libraries

Summary

In this chapter, we had a first look at the SoC principle. We understood why we must split an application's responsibilities across several layers and explored how we can do that with the help of presentation design patterns.

In the first part of this chapter, we had a quick look over the implementations for the most common presentation patterns in Android: MVC, MVP, and MVVM.

After that, we established that MVVM might be an appropriate choice for our Compose-based Restaurants application. We understood in which layer each type of logic must reside, and then tried to achieve SoC as well as possible in our application.

In the last part of this chapter, we noticed how easy it is for our UI layer to extend its responsibilities and start performing presentation logic by mutating the UI state within the ViewModel. To counter that, we learned how to better encapsulate the UI state by using backed properties.

Let's continue our journey of improving our application...