Yang
Posted on December 24, 2020
It's been over a year since the initial release of FlowBinding.
Over the last year we've added 4 new artifacts for AndroidX libraries, dropped our minimum SDK all the way back to API 14, introduced a new InitialValueFlow
API for widgets that emit state changes, and new API docs.
Today I'm excited share the 1.0 stable release of FlowBinding!
What's new
While the majority of the APIs have remained the same since the first public release (original blogpost) last year, we've made a decent amount of improvements to the library over the last 14 months.
New artifacts
Our focus has been on providing bindings for flowbinding-material
which is where most of the new UI widgets are being developed, but we also added 4 new artifacts for AndroidX libraries:
-
flowbinding-activity - provides binding on
OnBackPressedDispatcher
from AndroidX Activity -
flowbinding-lifecycle - turns lifecycle change events from AndroidX Lifecycle into
Flow<Lifecycle.Event>
-
flowbinding-preference - provides bindings for
Preference
andEditTextPreference
from AndroidX Preference (Settings) -
flowbinding-viewpager - backports bindings from
flowbinding-viewpager2
for the legacyandroidx.viewpager.widget.ViewPager
artifact.
Min SDK 14
Originally the minSdkVersion
FlowBinding required was API 21. While this is reasonable for most users, support for lower API levels remains essential for users who are developing for emerging markets (see this tweet for more context).
We've now dropped our minSdkVersion
to API 14.
Initial value
For UI widgets that hold a state internally such as the current value of a Slider (a recently added Material Component), our bindings used to provide an optional emitImmediately: Boolean
to indicate whether the current value should be emitted immediately when collected:
@CheckResult
@UseExperimental(ExperimentalCoroutinesApi::class)
fun Slider.valueChanges(emitImmediately: Boolean = false): Flow<Float> = callbackFlow {
...
}
The default value of emitImmediately
was false
which not everyone agrees.
After discussions within the community we've decided to introduce a new InitialValueFlow
for the bindings that emit state changes (many thanks to Sven Jacobs for the idea).
An InitialValueFlow
emits the current value (state) of the widget immediately upon collection of the Flow.
This effectively changed the previous default value of emitImmediately
from false
to true
, but communicates the behavior more clearly in the type itself.
To skip the initial emission of the current value, call the skipInitialValue()
function on the InitialValueFlow
:
slider.valueChanges()
.skipInitialValue()
.onEach { value ->
// handle value
}
.launchIn(uiScope) // current value won't be emitted immediately
This is also consistent with RxBinding's InitialValueObservable
.
New API Docs
FlowBinding has many artifacts and APIs. We now have a new project website that documents all transitive AndroidX dependencies and the bindings available in each artifact, along with new API docs powered by Dokka 1.4.
What's next?
Jetpack Compose is clearly the future of UI development for Android, while FlowBinding specifically targets the current generation of UI toolkits, which isn't going away anytime soon. The material-components-android library is still being actively developed with many new view-based components being added or planned.
Therefore we're planning to continue the work on maintaining AndroidX bindings and adding bindings for the new Material Design Components (e.g. TimePicker) as they become available.
Thanks!
I'd like to thank everyone who has used FlowBinding, reported bugs, made feature requests, participated in discussions or sent PRs in the last 14 months, which all contributed to what we've achieved with the library today!
Posted on December 24, 2020
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