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Simplifying Android Development with Coroutines and Flows

Simplifying Android Development with Coroutines and Flows

By : Jomar Tigcal
5 (2)
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Simplifying Android Development with Coroutines and Flows

Simplifying Android Development with Coroutines and Flows

5 (2)
By: Jomar Tigcal

Overview of this book

Coroutines and flows are the new recommended way for developers to carry out asynchronous programming in Android using simple, modern, and testable code. This book will teach you how coroutines and flows work and how to use them in building Android applications, along with helping you to develop modern Android applications with asynchronous programming using real data. The book begins by showing you how to create and handle Kotlin coroutines on Android. You’ll explore asynchronous programming in Kotlin, and understand how to test Kotlin coroutines. Next, you'll learn about Kotlin flows on Android, and have a closer look at using Kotlin flows by getting to grips with handling flow cancellations and exceptions and testing the flows. By the end of this book, you'll have the skills you need to build high-quality and maintainable Android applications using coroutines and flows.
Table of Contents (11 chapters)
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1
Part 1 – Kotlin Coroutines on Android
6
Part 2 – Kotlin Flows on Android

Canceling coroutines

In this section, we will start by looking at coroutine cancelations Developers can cancel coroutines in their projects manually or programmatically. You must make sure your application can handle these cancelations.

If your application is doing a long-running operation that is taking longer than expected and you think it could cause a crash, you might want to stop that task. You can also end tasks that are no longer necessary to free up memory and resources, such as when the user moves out of the activity that launched the task or closes the application. Users can also manually discontinue certain operations if you have that feature in your application. Coroutines make it easier for developers to cancel these tasks.

If you are using viewModelScope from ViewModel or lifecycleScope from the Jetpack Lifecycle Kotlin extension libraries, you can easily create coroutines without manually handling the cancelation. When ViewModel is cleared, viewModelScope is automatically...

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