Book Image

How to Build Android Apps with Kotlin

By : Alex Forrester, Eran Boudjnah, Alexandru Dumbravan, Jomar Tigcal
Book Image

How to Build Android Apps with Kotlin

By: Alex Forrester, Eran Boudjnah, Alexandru Dumbravan, Jomar Tigcal

Overview of this book

Are you keen to get started building Android 11 apps, but don’t know where to start? How to Build Android Apps with Kotlin is a comprehensive guide that will help kick-start your Android development practice. This book starts with the fundamentals of app development, enabling you to utilize Android Studio and Kotlin to get started building Android projects. You'll learn how to create apps and run them on virtual devices through guided exercises. Progressing through the chapters, you'll delve into Android’s RecyclerView to make the most of lists, images, and maps, and see how to fetch data from a web service. Moving ahead, you'll get to grips with testing, learn how to keep your architecture clean, understand how to persist data, and gain basic knowledge of the dependency injection pattern. Finally, you'll see how to publish your apps on the Google Play store. You'll work on realistic projects that are split up into bitesize exercises and activities, allowing you to challenge yourself in an enjoyable and attainable way. You'll build apps to create quizzes, read news articles, check weather reports, store recipes, retrieve movie information, and remind you where you parked your car. By the end of this book, you'll have the skills and confidence to build your own creative Android applications using Kotlin.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Preface
12
12. Dependency Injection with Dagger and Koin

Introduction

In the previous chapter, we looked at how to structure code into different components, including ViewModels, repositories, API components, and persistence components. One of the difficulties that always emerged was the dependencies between all of these components, especially when it came to how we approached the unit tests for them.

We have constantly used the Application class to create instances of these components and pass them in the constructors of the components one layer above (we created the API and Room instances, then the Repository instances, and so on). What we were doing was a simplistic version of dependency injection.

Dependency injection (DI) is a software technique in which one object (application) supplies the dependencies of another object (repositories, ViewModels). The reason for this is to increase the reusability and testability of the code and to shift the responsibility for creating instances from our components to the Application class...