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Utilities

Kotlin Utilities and Extensions for Android

Making Android Development Stupid Simple

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Add Utilities to your Android project using Jitpack and Gradle:

repositories {
  maven {url 'https://jitpack.io'}
}
...
dependencies {
  implementation 'com.github.Sub6Resources:Utilities:1.6.3'
}

Or: Legacy Android Support Library Support:

Add Utilities to your legacy project by using the legacy support branch.

dependencies {
  implementation 'com.github.Sub6Resources:Utilities:support-SNAPSHOT'
}

BaseActivity

BaseActivity is a super simple override of AppCompatActivity that removes unnecessary overrides to get straight to the point.

Simplest Example

import com.sub6resources.utilities.BaseActivity

class ExampleActivity: BaseActivity(R.layout.activity_example)

The above code is a super simple activity that does everything you would expect an Activity with no code to do: sit there.

When using fragments, the BaseActivity class becomes simple but powerful:

import com.sub6resources.utilities.BaseActivity

class MainActivity: BaseActivity(R.layout.activity_main) {
    override val landingFragment = LoginFragment() //LoginFragment extends BaseFragment
    override val fragmentTargets = R.id.fragment_target //Typically a FrameLayout
}

The above code will handle FragmentTransactions for you! There are several methods you can use to add or remove fragments from the stack:

addFragment(fragment: BaseFragment)

Adds a fragment to the stack and displays it.

popFragment()

Pops the topmost fragment from the stack.

switchFragment(fragment: BaseFragment)

Pops all fragments from the stack and adds a new fragment. (This makes it so that when the back button is pressed, this fragment will be the only fragment in the stack, making it impossible to navigate backwards. Helpful for login screens and forms.)

Navigation Drawer on BaseActivity

BaseActivity handles a Navigation Drawer (hamburger menu) on its own with a couple simple overrides:

import com.sub6resources.utilities.BaseActivity

class DrawerActivity: BaseActivity(R.layout.activity_drawer) {
    override val drawer by lazy {drawer_layout} //A DrawerLayout instance (accessed using Kotlin's Android Extensions  )
    override val sideNav by lazy {navigation_view} //The NavigationView   (these can also be accessed with findViewById)
    
    //It is also helpful to override the toolbar object to create the drawer button automatically
    override val toolbar = R.id.toolbar
}

Helpful functions on BaseActivity

startActivityForResult() on BaseActivity

BaseActivity allows for a simple way to call startActivityForResult without ugly overrides:

pick_contact_button.onClick {
    val pickContactIntent = Intent(Intent.ACTION_PICK, Uri.parse("content://contacts"));
    startActivityForResult(pickContactIntent) { resultCode, data ->
        //Perform operations on the result code and the data here
    }
}

BaseSettingsActivity

BaseSettingsActivity provides a simple DSL to create an activity that interfaces with sharedPreferences automatically with a given key.

A DSL for an Android Settings Activity

import com.sub6resources.utilities.*

class PreferencesActivity: BaseSettingsActivity() {
    override val settings = settingsActivity {
        title = "Settings"
        group("Common Settings") {
            setting("areNotificationsEnabled", false) {
                description = "Notifications Enabled"
                subtitleIfTrue = "Notifications are enabled"
                subtitleIfFalse = "Notifications not enabled"
            }
            setting("isReallyWorking", true) {
                subtitle = "IDK"
            }
        }
        group("Random Settings") {
            setting("isRandom", true) {
                description = "This is a random app"
                subtitleIfTrue = "Yes"
                subtitleIfFalse = "No"
            }
            setting("name", "John Smith") {
                description = "Name"
            }
            setting("age", 31) {
                description = "Age"
                units = "years"
            }
            setting("gender", "Male") {
                description = "Gender"
                options = arrayOf("Male", "Female")
            }
        }
        group("Facts") {
            setting("address", "") {
                description = "Address"
            }
            setting("answer", 42) {
                description = "The answer to life, the universe, and everything"
            }
        }
    }
}

    Here's what that code creates (but don't forget to register activity in the manifest)

BaseLegalActivity

BaseLegalActivity provides a simple DSL for stuff you would find on a typical 'Legal' activity in an Android app. (Things such as terms of service, privacy policy, copyright notices, and acknowledgments for 3rd party libraries.

Example of BaseLegalActivity DSL:

import com.sub6resources.utilities.*

class LegalActivity: BaseLegalActivity() {
    override val legal = legalActivity {
        title = "Legal"
        group {
            copyright = "Copyright (c) 2018 Sub 6 Resources"
        }
        group {
            title = "Terms and Privacy"

            terms {
                title = "Terms of Service"
                lastUpdatedText = "Updated 4/23/18"
                text = "You may use this app if you can.\nSub 6 Resources is not responsible for any Unicorns attempting to exist in (or near) Alaska."
            }

            privacy {
                title = "Privacy Policy"
                lastUpdatedText = "Does Not Exist :("
            }
        }
        group {
            title = "3rd Party Libraries"

            acknowledgement {
                title = "MyLibrary"
                copyright = "Copyright 2048 Nobody"
                license = License.MIT(copyright)
            }

            acknowledgement {
                title = "BoringLibrary"
                license = License.MIT_GENERIC
            }

            acknowledgement {
                title = "SomeOtherLibrary"
                copyright = "Copyright (c) Some Dude, 2016"
                license {
                    title = "My Favorite License"
                    text = "You can do whatever you can. You may do nothing."
                }
            }

            acknowledgement {
                title = "LuckyLibrary"
                copyright = "(c) 2017 The Three Amigos"
                license = License.APACHE(copyright)
            }

            acknowledgement {
                title = "Meow"
                license = License.APACHE_GENERIC
            }
        }
    }
}

The above DSL produces the following activity (don't forget to register the activity in the manifest):

      

PermissionActivity

PermissionActivity provides a simple way to request Android runtime permissions for API 23 and above. The checkPermission and checkListOfPermission are also available from BaseActivity

PermissionActivity from Kotlin

Example usage:

import android.Manifest
import com.sub6resources.utilities.PermissionActivity

class MyActivity: PermissionActivity {
    ...
    checkPermission(Manifest.permission.RECORD_AUDIO,
        onGranted = {
            //Do something on permission granted.
        },
        onDenied = {
            //Do something on permission denied.
        },
        showExplanation = { id ->
            //Do something when an explanation dialog needs to be shown.
            recheckPermission(id)
        }
        ...
}

This is an expanded example of the PermissionActivity. It will show a dialog for all permissions and if a permission is denied, will continue to show the dialog until the permission is granted.

Condensed example that does the exact same as above code:

import android.Manifest
import com.sub6resources.utilites.PermissionActivity

class MyActivity: PermissionActivity {
    ...
    checkPermission(Manifest.permission.RECORD_AUDIO)
    ...
}

PermissionActivity from Java (Requires Java 8 or higher)

Example usage:

import android.Manifest;
import com.sub6resources.utilites.PermissionActivity;

class MyActivity extends PermissionActivity {
    ...
    checkListOfPermissions(new String[] {Manifest.permission.CAMERA, Manifest.permission.READ_SMS}, //etc. Just make sure to include the permission in your manifest as well.
                (permission) -> {
                    //Do something on permission granted.
                    return null;
                },
                (permission) -> {
                    //Do something on permission denied.
                    return null;
                },
                (permission, id) -> {
                    //Do when a permission needs to be explained to the user, then...
                    recheckPermission(id);
                    return null;
                });
     ...
 }

Condensed version:

 checkListOfPermissions(new String[] {Manifest.permission.CAMERA, Manifest.permission.READ_SMS})

This is the most basic java example for the PermissionActivity. It will show a dialog for all permissions and if a permission is denied, will continue to show the dialog until the permission is granted.

BaseApplication

BaseApplication makes it super simple to initialize Koin and Retrofit

import com.sub6resources.utilities.BaseApplication

class Application: BaseApplication(appModule)

//A Koin Module. See Koin documentation for usage.
val appModule = applicationContext {
    val retrofit = Retrofit.Builder().logged("http://example.com:5432")
    
    //APIs (LoginApi is a Retrofit interface)
    provide { retrofit.create(LoginApi::class.java) }
    
    //Repositories
    provide { LoginRepository(get()) }
    
    //ViewModels
    viewModel { LoginViewModel(get()) }
}

BaseFragment

BaseFragment is built to allow for stupid simple interfacing with a standalone ViewModel or a shared ViewModel

import com.sub6resources.utilities.*

class LoginFragment: BaseFragment() {
    override val fragLayout = R.layout.fragment_login
    val loginViewModel by getViewModel<LoginViewModel>()
    
    override fun setUp() {
        //Initialize UI components
        btn_login.onClick {
            loginViewModel.login(et_username.getString(), et_password.getString())
        }
        loginViewModel.token.observe(this, Observer { data ->
            //Operate on ViewModel data
        })
    }
}

BaseFragment can also use the addFragment switchFragment and popFragment functions that BaseActivity has.

The BaseActivity that the BaseFragment is attached to can be accessed anywhere in the fragment with the immutable baseActivity variable.

Also useful is the getSharedViewModel function. This allows multiple BaseFragments to access the same ViewModel for more powerful MVVM development:

val dataViewModel by getSharedViewModel<DataViewModel>()