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inline fun <reified T> SharedPreferences.observeKey(key: String, default: T): Flow<T> = channelFlow { | |
send(getItem(key, default)) | |
val listener = SharedPreferences.OnSharedPreferenceChangeListener { _, k -> | |
if (key == k) { | |
trySend(getItem(key, default)) | |
} | |
} | |
registerOnSharedPreferenceChangeListener(listener) | |
awaitClose { | |
unregisterOnSharedPreferenceChangeListener(listener) | |
} | |
} | |
inline fun <reified T> SharedPreferences.getItem(key: String, default: T): T { | |
@Suppress("UNCHECKED_CAST") | |
return when (default) { | |
is String -> getString(key, default) as T | |
is Int -> getInt(key, default) as T | |
is Long -> getLong(key, default) as T | |
is Boolean -> getBoolean(key, default) as T | |
is Float -> getFloat(key, default) as T | |
is Set<*> -> getStringSet(key, default as Set<String>) as T | |
else -> error("generic type not handled ${T::class.java.name}") | |
} | |
} |
implementation updated using MutableStateFlow
instead of Channel
Can I use parts of this code (giving credit of course) to support a class I'm teaching on migrating from Java to Kotlin?
@neuhoffm yeah sure feel free to use any gist from my profile and good luck ๐
Awesome, thank you!
Thanks for the idea!
Are you sure flow.onCompletion
part works as expected? According to the docs, StateFlow
never completes.
Also, registerOnSharedPreferenceChangeListener
has a warning that the listener might be garbage-collected prematurely.
Hi @gmk57! onCompletion
seems to be called correctly, and I think that's because it's creating internally an unsafeFlow
, but you can use a channelFlow
as well
regarding the listener being garbage collected I never seen that warning, which version are you using? ๐ค
Indeed, onCompletion
is triggered by the collector's cancellation:
@Test
fun testOnCompletion() = runBlocking {
var onCompleteCalled = false
MutableStateFlow("abc")
.onCompletion { onCompleteCalled = true }
.take(1).collect()
assertTrue(onCompleteCalled)
}
This quirk is mentioned in the docs: "Unlike catch, this operator reports exception that occur both upstream and downstream and observe exceptions that are thrown to cancel the flow". I would say that onCompletion
name is somewhat misleading. ;)
As for listener, I've seen it in the javadocs, at least for API 29-32.
inline fun <reified T> SharedPreferences.observeKey(key: String, default: T?): Flow<T?> {
val flow = MutableStateFlow(getItem(key, default))
val listener = SharedPreferences.OnSharedPreferenceChangeListener { _, k ->
if (key == k) {
try {
flow.value = getItem(key, default)!!
} catch (e: Exception) {
flow.value = null
}
}
}
return flow
.onCompletion { unregisterOnSharedPreferenceChangeListener(listener) }
.onStart { registerOnSharedPreferenceChangeListener(listener) }
}
inline fun <reified T> SharedPreferences.getItem(key: String, default: T?): T? {
@Suppress("UNCHECKED_CAST")
return when (default) {
is String? -> getString(key, default) as T?
is Int -> getInt(key, default) as T
is Long -> getLong(key, default) as T
is Boolean -> getBoolean(key, default) as T
is Float -> getFloat(key, default) as T
is Set<*> -> getStringSet(key, default as Set<String>) as T
else -> throw IllegalArgumentException("generic type not handle ${T::class.java.name}")
}
}
Updated to take into account the null value (if no value is stored for this key)
Add register in the 'onStart' otherwise the flow was cancelled every recomposition :)
Hmm, @tkubasik-luna your version always produces Flow<T?>
while the original one returned Flow<T>
. We provide the default value, so the latter makes more sense to me. And it worked fine when no value is stored for the key, thanks to the default
passed to getString
, getInt
, etc.
try/catch
could potentially catch the "stored type does not match expected type" kind of errors, but in this case we fail earlier, on line 2. And it's probably good, because this type mismatch is clearly a programmer's mistake which should be fixed.
As for cancellation, in my testing both variants cancel/restart on every recomposition when called directly inside composable. I suppose it's inevitable since we're creating a new flow each time. But this is easily solved by wrapping prefs.observeKey()
in remember
, or better by moving it to a more stable place, e.g. ViewModel
or Repository
. ๐
I came with this solution:
private fun SharedPreferences.userIdFlow(key: String, defValue: String?): Flow<String?> = callbackFlow {
var currentValue = getString(key, defValue)
val listener = SharedPreferences.OnSharedPreferenceChangeListener { _, k ->
if (k == key) {
val newValue = getString(key, defValue)
if (newValue != currentValue) {
currentValue = newValue
trySend(newValue).isSuccess
}
}
}
registerOnSharedPreferenceChangeListener(listener)
if (currentValue != null && currentValue!!.isNotEmpty()) {
trySend(currentValue).isSuccess // emit current value immediately if not null and not empty
}
awaitClose { unregisterOnSharedPreferenceChangeListener(listener) }
}
What's your analysis on it compared to yours?
@mobilekosmos as MutableSet
is always also a Set
, your code would never return a MutableSet
.
Then again: why would you want to put a MutableSet
into SharedPreferences
in the first place? It would lose its mutability anyway the moment you serialize. And when you return it, you actually only ever get an immutable set. Which one could then make a mutable set at the call site, if needed.
I would just remove that when branch altogether.
What I'm using now is kind of a mix between @ologe's and @mobilekosmos 's approach:
inline fun <reified T> SharedPreferences.observeKey(
coroutineScope: CoroutineScope,
coroutineContextProvider: CoroutineContextProvider,
key: String,
default: T,
): Flow<T> = callbackFlow {
trySend(getItem(coroutineContextProvider, key, default))
val listener = SharedPreferences.OnSharedPreferenceChangeListener { _, k ->
if (k == key) {
coroutineScope.launch {
trySend(getItem(coroutineContextProvider, key, default))
}
}
}
registerOnSharedPreferenceChangeListener(listener)
awaitClose { unregisterOnSharedPreferenceChangeListener(listener) }
}.conflate()
suspend inline fun <reified T> SharedPreferences.getItem(
coroutineContextProvider: CoroutineContextProvider,
key: String,
default: T,
): T = withContext(coroutineContextProvider.io) {
@Suppress("UNCHECKED_CAST")
when (default) {
is String -> getString(key, default) as T
is Int -> getInt(key, default) as T
is Long -> getLong(key, default) as T
is Boolean -> getBoolean(key, default) as T
is Float -> getFloat(key, default) as T
is Set<*> -> getStringSet(key, default as Set<String>) as T
else -> throw IllegalArgumentException("generic type not handle ${T::class.java.name}")
}
}
@ubuntudroid yeah probably handling MutableSet is not actually needed, I think the initial thought was that kotlin.collection.MutableSet
translated into java.util.Set
btw about switching dispatcher, I think is unnecessary because if I remember correctly SharedPreferences is just a glorified HashMap, and everything is stored (additionally) in memory, the expensive part of the api is writing to disk
I'm also updating the gist to what I think is the cleanest way after almost 4 years ๐
What if
getItem
is suspend function?