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Kickstart Modern Android Development with Jetpack and Kotlin

You're reading from   Kickstart Modern Android Development with Jetpack and Kotlin Enhance your applications by integrating Jetpack and applying modern app architectural concepts

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801811071
Length 472 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Catalin Ghita Catalin Ghita
Author Profile Icon Catalin Ghita
Catalin Ghita
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Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Exploring the Core Jetpack Suite and Other Libraries
2. Chapter 1: Creating a Modern UI with Jetpack Compose FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Handling UI State with Jetpack ViewModel 4. Chapter 3: Displaying Data from REST APIs with Retrofit 5. Chapter 4: Handling Async Operations with Coroutines 6. Chapter 5: Adding Navigation in Compose With Jetpack Navigation 7. Part 2: A Guide to Clean Application Architecture with Jetpack Libraries
8. Chapter 6: Adding Offline Capabilities with Jetpack Room 9. Chapter 7: Introducing Presentation Patterns in Android 10. Chapter 8: Getting Started with Clean Architecture in Android 11. Chapter 9: Implementing Dependency Injection with Jetpack Hilt 12. Chapter 10: Test Your App with UI and Unit Tests 13. Part 3: Diving into Other Jetpack Libraries
14. Chapter 11: Creating Infinite Lists with Jetpack Paging and Kotlin Flow 15. Chapter 12: Exploring the Jetpack Lifecycle Components 16. Other Books You May Enjoy

Further reading

Knowing how to work with the basics of Hilt is usually enough for most projects. However, sometimes you might need to use more advanced features of Hilt or Dagger. To learn more about Dagger and how the framework automatically creates the dependencies for you by building a dependency graph, check this article: https://medium.com/android-news/dagger-2-part-i-basic-principles-graph-dependencies-scopes-3dfd032ccd82.

On the same note, apart from the @Singleton scope that was the most used scope throughout our app, Dagger Hilt exposes a broader variety of predefined components and scopes that allow you to scope different classes to various lifecycles. Check out more about components and their scopes in the official documentation: https://dagger.dev/hilt/components.html.

Leaving components and their scopes aside, in some projects, you might need to allow injection of dependencies in other Android classes than Activity. To see which Android classes can be annotated with...

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