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Implementation of osu!framework's Bindable concept in Kotlin Multiplatform.

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bindable

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Implementation of osu!framework's Bindable concept in Kotlin Multiplatform. To learn more about Bindable and its original use-cases, please refer to osu!framework's Bindable wiki.

bindable supports Android and iOS (more to come).

You may wonder why you need bindable when Kotlin already have powerful observable concept like Flow. The answer is simple, I don't know either. I made this simply because bindable concept is kinda cool to me and that would be cool if we have similar thing in Kotlin. In short, I made this just for fun and don't really have a real world use-case (at least for now).

setup (Gradle)

dependencies {
    implementation("moe.ganen.bindable:bindable:0.0.1")
}

bindable example

Below is the basic usage of bindable. You can also check the usage of this library in the example package.

val bindable = Bindable(0)
val bindable1 = bindable.getBoundCopy()

bindable.bindValueChanged { println(it.newValue) }
bindable.value = 100

assertEquals(100, bindable1) // true

You can also use it in Java classes.

void example() {
    Bindable<Integer> bindable = BindableExtKt.Bindable(10);
    Bindable<Integer> bindable1 = bindable.getBoundCopy();

    bindable1.bindValueChanged(false, value -> System.out.println(value.getNewValue()));
    bindable.setValue(100);
}

leased bindable example

To read more about leasing concept please read osu!framework wiki about leasing bindable.

val x: Bindable<Int> = Bindable(2) // x.value == 2
val leased = x.beginLease(true)

leased.value = 1 // x.value == 1
leased.returnLease() // x.value == 2

experimenting its usage on Android

I previously mentioned that this library doesn't have any real world use case as you should use any better dependencies likeFlow. But that doesn't mean that this library can't be used on real application.

Let say you have a ViewModel or Presenter that expose a Bindable and you want to observe it on your screen (let's use Compose UI for this example).

class SomeViewModel : ViewModel(someRepository: SomeRepository) {
    val bindable: Bindable<SomeData?> = Bindable(null)

    init {
        coroutineScope.launch {
            someRepository.observable.collectLatest {
                bindable.value = it
            }
        }
    }
}

You can observe the bindable in your UI by creating a bindable on your UI and bind it to exposed bindable from the viewModel.

@Composable
fun SomeScreen(viewModelFactory: () -> SomeViewModel) {
    val someViewModel = viewModel(::viewModelFactory)
    val bindableData: Bindable<SomeData?> = remember { Bindable(null) }
    var someData by remember { mutableStateOf(bindableData.value) }

    LaunchedEffect(bindableData) {
        /* in the real usage of bindable, you often need to create a local bindable and bind it to more persistent 
        bindable (in this case is the exposed bindable from viewModel).
         */
        bindableData.bindTo(someViewModel.someData)
        bindableData.bindValueChanged(true) { someData = it.newValue }
    }

    // Composable function that actually use someData.
    SomeDataScreen(someData = someData)
}

please note that this is just an experiment and may have some adjustment and improvement in the future.

license

This library is licensed under the MIT licence. For more information please refer to the licence file. This license is not covering the usage of osu!framework name or anything related to osu!framework. For more information about osu!framework license, please refer to the osu!framework repository.

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