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  • Mastering Kotlin for Android 14
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Mastering Kotlin for Android 14

Mastering Kotlin for Android 14

By : Wangereka
5 (9)
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Mastering Kotlin for Android 14

Mastering Kotlin for Android 14

5 (9)
By: Wangereka

Overview of this book

Written with the best practices, this book will help you master Kotlin and use its powerful language features, libraries, tools, and APIs to elevate your Android apps. As you progress, you'll use Jetpack Compose and Material Design 3 to build UIs for your app, explore how to architect and improve your app architecture, and use Jetpack Libraries like Room and DataStore to persist your data locally. Using a step-by-step approach, this book will teach you how to debug issues in your app, detect leaks, inspect network calls fired by your app, and inspect your Room database. You'll also add tests to your apps to detect and address code smells. Toward the end, you’ll learn how to publish apps to the Google Play Store and see how to automate the process of deploying consecutive releases using GitHub actions, as well as learn how to distribute test builds to Firebase App Distribution. Additionally, the book covers tips on how to increase user engagement. By the end of this Kotlin book, you’ll be able to develop market-ready apps, add tests to their codebase, address issues, and get them in front of the right audience.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
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1
Part 1: Building Your App
6
Part 2: Using Advanced Features
12
Part 3: Code Analysis and Tests
16
Part 4: Publishing Your App

Testing our ViewModels

Our ViewModel class fetches data from the repository and exposes it to the UI. To test our ViewModel, we will write unit tests. Let us start by setting up the test dependencies in our version catalog:

  1. Open the libs.version.toml file and add the following versions in the versions section:
    mockk = "1.13.3"
  2. Next, in the libraries section, add the following:
    test-mockk = { module = "io.mockk:mockk", version.ref = "mockk" }
  3. Add the test-mockk dependency to the test bundle. Our updated test bundle should now look like this:
    test = ["test-mock-webserver", "test-coroutines", "test-truth", "test-mockk"]
  4. Click on the Sync Now button at the top to add the dependencies. Adding mockk allows us to mock our dependencies.
  5. We are now ready to create our test class. Create a new Kotlin file called CatsViewModelTest.kt inside the test directory and add the following code:
    class PetsViewModelTest...
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