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How to Build Android Apps with Kotlin - Second Edition

You're reading from  How to Build Android Apps with Kotlin - Second Edition

Product type Book
Published in May 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781837634934
Pages 704 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
Authors (4):
Alex Forrester Alex Forrester
Profile icon Alex Forrester
Eran Boudjnah Eran Boudjnah
Profile icon Eran Boudjnah
Alexandru Dumbravan Alexandru Dumbravan
Profile icon Alexandru Dumbravan
Jomar Tigcal Jomar Tigcal
Profile icon Jomar Tigcal
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Table of Contents (24) Chapters

Preface 1. Part 1: Android Foundation
2. Chapter 1: Creating Your First App 3. Chapter 2: Building User Screen Flows 4. Chapter 3: Developing the UI with Fragments 5. Chapter 4: Building App Navigation 6. Part 2: Displaying Network Calls
7. Chapter 5: Essential Libraries: Retrofit, Moshi, and Glide 8. Chapter 6: Adding and Interacting with RecyclerView 9. Chapter 7: Android Permissions and Google Maps 10. Chapter 8: Services, WorkManager, and Notifications 11. Chapter 9: Building User Interfaces Using Jetpack Compose 12. Part 3: Testing and Code Structure
13. Chapter 10: Unit Tests and Integration Tests with JUnit, Mockito, and Espresso 14. Chapter 11: Android Architecture Components 15. Chapter 12: Persisting Data 16. Chapter 13: Dependency Injection with Dagger, Hilt, and Koin 17. Part 4: Polishing and Publishing an App
18. Chapter 14: Coroutines and Flow 19. Chapter 15: Architecture Patterns 20. Chapter 16: Animations and Transitions with CoordinatorLayout and MotionLayout 21. Chapter 17: Launching Your App on Google Play 22. Index 23. Other Books You May Enjoy

Room

The Room persistence library acts as a wrapper between your application code and the SQLite storage. You can think of SQLite as a database that runs without its own server and saves all the application data in an internal file that’s only accessible to your application (if the device is not rooted).

Room sits between the application code and the SQLite Android Framework, and handles the necessary create, read, update, and delete (CRUD) operations while exposing an abstraction that your application can use to define the data and how you want the data to be handled. This abstraction comes in the form of the following objects:

  • Entities: You can specify how you want your data to be stored and the relationships between your data
  • Data access object (DAO): The operations that can be done on your data
  • Database: You can specify the configurations that your database should have (the name of the database and migration scenarios)

These can be seen in the following...

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