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Clean Android Architecture

Clean Android Architecture

By : Alexandru Dumbravan
4.5 (6)
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Clean Android Architecture

Clean Android Architecture

4.5 (6)
By: Alexandru Dumbravan

Overview of this book

As an application’s code base increases, it becomes harder for developers to maintain existing features and introduce new ones. In this clean architecture book, you'll learn to identify when and how this problem emerges and how to structure your code to overcome it. The book starts by explaining clean architecture principles and Android architecture components and then explores the tools, frameworks, and libraries involved. You’ll learn how to structure your application in the data and domain layers, the technologies that go in each layer, and the role that each layer plays in keeping your application clean. You’ll understand how to arrange the code into these two layers and the components involved in assembling them. Finally, you'll cover the presentation layer and the patterns that can be applied to have a decoupled and testable code base. By the end of this architecture book, you'll be able to build an application following clean architecture principles and have the knowledge you need to maintain and test the application easily.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
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1
Part 1 – Introduction
6
Part 2 – Domain and Data Layers
10
Part 3 – Presentation Layer

Summary

In this chapter, we looked at the DI pattern and some of the more popular libraries that are available to apply this pattern to an Android application. We looked initially at Dagger 2 and how it can be integrated into an application, and then we analyzed the Hilt library, which is built on top of Dagger 2 and solves further problems that are specific to Android development.

There are other libraries that can be used to manage dependencies, such as Koin, which uses the Service Locator pattern (in which a registry is created and dependencies can be obtained) and is developed for Kotlin development. The exercise in this chapter showed how Hilt can be integrated with other libraries into an Android application. The problem is that the application still has no shape; there isn't anything we can point to that indicates what the use cases are. In the chapters that follow, we will look further into how we can structure our code to give it a shape using the Clean Architecture...

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