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How to Build Android Apps with Kotlin

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

Product type Book
Published in Feb 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838984113
Pages 794 pages
Edition 1st 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
View More author details

Table of Contents (17) Chapters

Preface
1. Creating Your First App 2. Building User Screen Flows 3. Developing the UI with Fragments 4. Building App Navigation 5. Essential Libraries: Retrofit, Moshi, and Glide 6. RecyclerView 7. Android Permissions and Google Maps 8. Services, WorkManager, and Notifications 9. Unit Tests and Integration Tests with JUnit, Mockito, and Espresso 10. Android Architecture Components 11. Persisting Data 12. Dependency Injection with Dagger and Koin 13. RxJava and Coroutines 14. Architecture Patterns 15. Animations and Transitions with CoordinatorLayout and MotionLayout 16. Launching Your App on Google Play

Preferences

Imagine you are tasked with integrating a third-party API that uses something such as OAuth to implement logging in with Facebook, Google, and suchlike. The way these mechanisms work is as follows: they give you a token that you have to store locally and that can then be used to send other requests to access user data. The questions you're faced with are: How can you store that token? Do you use Room just for one token? Do you save the token in a separate file and implement methods for writing the file? What if that file has to be accessed in multiple places at the same time? SharedPreferences is an answer to these questions. SharedPreferences is a functionality that allows you to save Booleans, integers, floats, longs, strings, and sets of strings into an XML file. When you want to save new values, you specify what values you want to save for the associated keys, and when you are done, you commit the change, which will trigger the save to the XML file in an asynchronous...

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