requireKTX is a collection of small utility functions to make it easier to work with values that should always exist on Android and Kotlin Multiplatform, in the style of requireContext
, requireArguments
, and other similar Android SDK methods.
Types that requireKTX provides extensions for:
- Bundle (Kotlin Multiplatform)
- NavBackStackEntry (Kotlin Multiplatform)
- Intent (Android)
- WorkManager Data (Android)
Take the example of grabbing a Bundle and reading a String ID from it that should always be there: the Bundle APIs give you a nullable result, which means you'll have to do some kind of null handling.
// Without requireKTX 😥
val id: String = argumentBundle.getString("user_id")!!
The exception potentially thrown by this code also won't be too helpful in tracking down the problem, as it won't tell you details such as whether the value was missing, or if it was the wrong type for the request.
Another problem with Bundles is accessing primitive values, as they're always returned as non-nullable, defaulting to 0
(or even worse, false
for Booleans) if the key is not found or its associated value has the wrong type:
val bundle = Bundle()
bundle.putDouble("count", 123.0)
// These both pass 😱
assertEquals(0, bundle.getInt("count"))
assertEquals(0, bundle.getInt("score"))
This makes it difficult to know if what you received was a real 0
value, or if something silently went wrong.
Instead of using these methods, requireKTX provides extensions such as requireString
, which you can use to require a value that must always be there:
// With requireKTX 🥳
val id: String = argumentBundle.requireString("user_id")
val count: Int = argumentBundle.requireInt("count")
These methods give you non-nullable return types. If the key isn't set or the value doesn't have the expected type, they throw meaningful exceptions based on the error that occurred. This is true for accessing primitive values as well.
requireKTX also includes getOrNull
style methods for everything that it covers with require
style methods,to make the nullable case more obvious and explicit. These match the conventions of the Kotlin Standard Library, and can make it clearer that null
is returned if a value for a key couldn't be fetched.
val userId: String? = requireArguments().getStringOrNull("user_id")
val count: Int? = requireArguments().getIntOrNull("count")
requireKTX is published on Maven Central.
repositories {
mavenCentral()
}
There are several artifacts you can import depending on which types you want to get extensions for - see the module descriptions below to learn more.
dependencies {
// commonMain or Android
implementation("co.zsmb:requirektx-bundle:2.0.0-alpha03")
implementation("co.zsmb:requirektx-navigation:2.0.0-alpha03")
// Android only
implementation("co.zsmb:requirektx-intent:2.0.0-alpha03")
implementation("co.zsmb:requirektx-work:2.0.0-alpha03")
}
The requirektx-bundle
artifact works with the androidx.core.bundle.Bundle
type, available on Android and other Kotlin Multiplatform targets from org.jetbrains.androidx.core:core-bundle
.
Given a Bundle
, you can require the following types of values:
// Primitives (examples)
bundle.requireBoolean()
bundle.requireByte()
bundle.requireChar()
bundle.requireDouble()
bundle.requireFloat()
// Reference types
bundle.requireString()
bundle.requireBundle()
bundle.requireCharSequence()
bundle.requireParcelable()
bundle.requireSerializable()
// Arrays (examples)
bundle.requireBooleanArray()
bundle.requireByteArray()
bundle.requireCharArray()
bundle.requireDoubleArray()
bundle.requireFloatArray()
... and many more!
The requirektx-navigation
artifact works with the androidx.navigation.NavBackStackEntry
type, available on Android and other Kotlin Multiplatform targets from org.jetbrains.androidx.navigation:navigation-runtime
.
This is compatible with both the Jetpack Navigation component on Android (with or without Compose) and the Compose Multiplatform navigation library.
To get the bundle of arguments from an entry, use requireArguments
:
val args: Bundle = navBackStackEntry.requireArguments()
Here's an example of using this with Compose Navigation, in combination with the Bundle extensions:
composable(
"detail/{objectId}",
arguments = listOf(navArgument("objectId") { type = NavType.IntType }),
) { backStackEntry ->
val args = backStackEntry.requireArguments()
val objectId = args.requireInt("objectId")
// UI implementation
}
The requirektx-intent
artifact works with the android.content.Intent
type, available on Android only.
Given an Intent
, you can require its extras Bundle
(and then require values from it as seen above):
val extras: Bundle = intent.requireExtras()
Or you can require specific extras directly for various types of values:
// Primitives (examples)
intent.requireBooleanExtra()
intent.requireByteExtra()
intent.requireCharExtra()
intent.requireDoubleExtra()
intent.requireFloatExtra()
// Reference types
intent.requireStringExtra()
intent.requireBundleExtra()
intent.requireCharSequenceExtra()
intent.requireParcelableExtra()
intent.requireSerializableExtra()
// Arrays (examples)
intent.requireBooleanArrayExtra()
intent.requireByteArrayExtra()
intent.requireCharArrayExtra()
intent.requireDoubleArrayExtra()
intent.requireFloatArrayExtra()
... and many more!
The requirektx-work
artifact provides extensions for the androidx.work.Data
type, available on Android only.
Given a WorkManager Data
object (such as inputData
inside a worker), you can require the following types of values:
class SomeWorker : Worker() {
override fun doWork(): Result {
// Values
inputData.requireBoolean()
inputData.requireByte()
inputData.requireDouble()
inputData.requireFloat()
inputData.requireInt()
inputData.requireLong()
inputData.requireString()
// Arrays
inputData.requireBooleanArray()
inputData.requireByteArray()
inputData.requireDoubleArray()
inputData.requireFloatArray()
inputData.requireIntArray()
inputData.requireLongArray()
inputData.requireStringArray()
// ...
}
}
Copyright 2021 Márton Braun
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.