This library provides reactive shared preferences interaction with very little code. It is designed specifically to be used with Kotlin.
Inspiration has been taken from other libraries, but it was written from the ground up on its own.
Add this to your module's build.gradle
file:
dependencies {
implementation "com.afollestad.rxkprefs:core:2.0.3"
}
The core of the library is the RxkPrefs
interface. You can retrieve an instance of this interface
with the rxkPrefs
method, which takes 3 parameters. One of these parameters is optional
(the shared preferences mode).
// Parameter is your Context, like an Activity, uses PreferenceManager#getDefaultSharedPreferences
val myPrefs = rxkPrefs(this)
// First parameter is your Context, like an Activity, the second is a key.
val myPrefs = rxkPrefs(this, "my_prefs")
// The optional third parameter is a mode, it defaults to MODE_PRIVATE above.
// This is like using Context.getSharedPreferences("my_prefs", MODE_PRIVATE)
val myPrefs = rxkPrefs(this, "my_prefs", MODE_PRIVATE)
With a RxkPrefs
instance, you can retrieve preferences. By that, I do not mean the raw
value of the preference, but an instance of the Pref
interface which provides more functionality.
val myPrefs: RxkPrefs = // ...
// Getting a string preference is as simple as this:
val myString: Pref<String> = myPrefs.string("my_string", "default_value")
// You could omit the second parameter to use the default, default value (empty string)
val myString: Pref<String> = myPrefs.string("my_string")
Once you have a reference to a preference, there are a few things you can do with them.
val myPref: Pref<Int> = // ...
// The key of the preference - first parameter passed in prefs.integer(...) or any other pref getter
// This is always a String.
val key: String = myPref.key()
// The default value of the preference - second parameter passed in prefs.integer(...) or any other pref getter...
// Or the primitive default, such as an empty string, 0, or false.
val defaultValue: Int = myPref.defaultValue()
// The current value of the preference, or the default value if none.
val currentValue: Int = myPref.get()
// Changes the value of the preference.
myPref.set(1024)
// True if a value has been set, otherwise false.
val isSet: Boolean = myPref.isSet()
// Deletes any existing value for the preference.
myPref.delete()
// These are used by the RxJava and coroutines extensions, but you may find them useful.
myPref.addOnChangedListener { }
myPref.addOnDestroyedListener { }
// Destroys the instance, clearing listeners and anything that could leak memory.
myPref.destroy()
Add this to your module's build.gradle
file:
dependencies {
implementation "com.afollestad.rxkprefs:coroutines:2.0.3"
}
You can receive changes to a preference in real-time using a coroutines Flow
, specifically a hot
flow.
val myPref: Pref<Boolean> = // ...
val flow: Flow<Boolean> = myPref.asFlow()
// One way...
scope.launch {
flow.collect { println(it) }
}
// Another way...
flow
.onEach { println(it) }
.launchIn(scope)
Add this to your module's build.gradle
file:
dependencies {
implementation "com.afollestad.rxkprefs:rxjava:2.0.3"
}
You can receive changes to a preference in real-time using an RxJava Observable.
val myPref: Pref<Long> = // ...
val obs: Observable<Long> = myPref.observe()
val disposable = obs.subscribe { newValue ->
// use new value
}
// when you no longer want to receive values
sub.dispose()
Further usage of this is more of an RxJava issue and less specific to this library. You should have a basic understanding of what you can do with RxJava and what its use cases are.
Pref
can act as an RxJava Consumer
. You can use this to save preference values
from the emissions of an Observable.
Say you're using RxBinding to bind Android views to Observables that emit when their value changes, such as a CheckBox:
val myPref: Pref<Boolean> = // ...
RxCompoundButton.checks(yourCheckboxView)
.subscribe(myPref.asConsumer())
Whenever the checkbox is checked or unchecked, the underlying boolean shared preference is set to true or false automatically.
Basically, it works like this:
val myObs: Observable<String> = // ...
val myConsumer: Consumer<String> = // ...which can be from an instance of Pref
myObs.subscribe(myConsumer)