Awesome
Vector
Vector is an Android library to help implement the MVI architecture pattern.
It is inspired from MvRx and Roxie, but unlike them it is built completely using Kotlin Coroutines instead of RxJava. As such, it internally only uses Coroutine primitives, and has extensive support for Suspending functions.
Vector works well with Android Architecture Components. It is 100% Kotlin, and is intended for use with Kotlin only.
Building Blocks
Vector is based primarily around three classes: VectorViewModel
, VectorState
, and VectorFragment
.
- VectorViewModel
The Vector ViewModel class is the heart of any screen built with Vector. It is an abstract class extending the Android Architecture Components ViewModel class, and therefore survives configuration changes. It is generic on a class implementing the VectorState
interface. It is also the only class which can mutate state.
It exposes the current state through a Kotlin Flow
.
- VectorState
VectorState is an interface denoting a model class representing the view's state. We recommend using Kotlin data classes to represent view state in the interest of keeping state immutable. Use the generated copy()
method to create new state objects.
- VectorFragment
Vector provides an abstract VectorFragment
class extending from AndroidX's Fragment class. A VectorFragment
has a convenient coroutine scope, which can be used to easily launch Coroutines from a Fragment.
Example
Here's a contrived example to show how an app written in Vector looks like.
VectorState
data class MyState(val message: String): VectorState
VectorFragment
class MyFragment: VectorFragment() {
private val myViewModel: MyViewModel by fragmentViewModel()
override fun onViewCreated(view: View, savedInstanceState: Bundle?) {
renderState(viewModel) { state ->
toast(state.message)
}
}
}
VectorViewModel
class MyViewModel(initState: MyState): VectorViewModel<MyState>(initState) {
init {
getMessage()
}
fun getMessage() = setState {
copy(message = "Hello, world!")
}
}
When the setState()
function is given a state reducer, it internally enqueues it to a Kotlin Actor
. The reducers passed to this actor are processed sequentially to avoid race conditions.
Documentation
The docs can be found at the project's documentation website.
Projects using Vector
- You can find a sample app along with the library in this repository.
- MoonShot is another project of mine. It's an app to help you keep up with SpaceX launches, and is built with Vector.
If you would like your project using Vector to be featured here, please open an Issue on the repository. I shall take a look at it and add your project to the list.
Installation Instructions
Add the Jitpack repository to your top level build.gradle
file.
allprojects {
repositories {
...
maven { url 'https://jitpack.io' }
}
}
And then add the following dependency in your module's build.gradle
file:
dependencies {
implementation "com.github.haroldadmin:Vector:(latest-version)"
}
Find the latest stable release version on the Releases page.
Latest release (stable/unstable):
Contributing
If you like this project, or are using it in your app, consider starring the repository to show your support. Contributions from the community are very welcome.