Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
120 lines (80 loc) · 7.12 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

120 lines (80 loc) · 7.12 KB

Welcome to PenKnife

Inspired by Dagger 2 and Pocket Knife this is a library that helps you speed up your development cycle by creating builders, getters and injectors based upon your project requirements at the cost of initial setup removing your need for intent/bundle factories.

How to get started.

Tag a field

@PKBind(ResultActivity.class)
public int myInte;

Tag a Method

 @PKBind(ResultActivity.class)
public void injectUserHere(SerializedUser user){
    getView().showUser(user);
}

As you can see, PKBind takes one parameter of type Class this will indicate the Scope of this bindable Class/Field/Method. Meanning that any other @PKBind annotated elements will be grouped under one class named PKBuild[Your_Class] and PKExtract[Your_Class]. Case in point, say we have a custom view, some Class such as a ViewModel or Presenter. You would annotate methods/fields or even the classes themselves and when you annotate with @PKBind set the class to point at the activity you would normally extract bundled parameters from and that's it. The annotation processor will generate the Build and Extract classes.

Usage of PKBuild (Default settings):

Bundle bundle = PkBuildResultActivity.builder()
                    .provideFlag(booleanView.isChecked())
                    .provideMessage(welcomeMessage.getText().toString())
                    .provideUser(new SerializedUser(nameView.getText().toString(),            
                    Integer.parseInt(ageView.getText().toString())))
                    .build();
            Intent intent = new Intent();
            intent.putExtras(bundle);
            intent.setClass(MainActivity.this, ResultActivity.class);
            startActivity(intent)

Usage of PKExtract (Default Settings):

@Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
    PKExtractResultActivity.newInstance(getIntent().getExtras())
                    .inject(getPresenter())
                    .inject(this);
}

As you can see, by default the default settings will cause your PKBuild to return a Bundle (Or which ever type of java container you wish to utilize). Additionally even though PKExtract[**] comes with getter methods for each bundled item, it also generates an injection method for each class which featured a @PKBind annotation on or in it.

Additionally, every object that you can add to your bundle will also have a "contains" check, this is required due to the casting of primitives, meaning if you have a primitive that was never added to the parameters required for a injection method, the injection method will enver be called! This is required in order to not interfere with the values of passed in parameters. (Primitives aren't nullable)

The syntax is as such:

if(PKExtractResultActivity.newInstance(bundle).containsUser()){
                //do something
            }

Setup instructions

  • Setup gradle dependencies (TODO)

  • Either utilize the PenKnifeHandlerImpl I created or make your own by implementing this interface PenKnifeHandler This will be call back that the generated code utilizes at run time to deal with bundling/unbundling.

  • Annotate any class in your project, but I recommend going with the Application file.

      //container = class of desired java container, handlerImpl points to your IMPL of PenKnifeHandler
      @PKHandler(container = Bundle.class, handlerImpl = PenKnifeHandlerImpl.class)
    
  • Add this line of code to your application's OnCreate (Could be any PenKnifeHandler implementation):

      PenKnife.initialize(new PenKnifeHandlerImpl());
    
  • Done. Now your project is ready to be annotated!

A gist of my DemoApplication.java

Optional settings

When you annotate a field/method/class with @PKBuild you have the ability to assign a priority to that annotation. 0 is the default value, this priority is used to determine the order in which the annotated elements are injected. This is in case you have injectable elements which rely on one another to not error out.

@PKBind(value = ResultActivity.class, priorityOfTarget = 1)
    public void injectMessageAndBoolean(boolean flag, String message){
        getView().showWelcomeMessageAndFlag(message, flag);
    }

This will result in this generated injectionmethod:

PKExtractResultActivity inject(ResultViewPresenter injectableField) {
    injectableField.injectMessageAndBoolean(getFlag(), getMessage());
    injectableField.injectUserHere(getUser());
  }

If you annotate a class with @PKBind you will generate provide methods/extract and (optionally) injection methods for any non privae/protected fields. Meaning in cases with several injectable fields but a few public non-injectable fields you may want to annoate the class itself to save clutter. That's where @PKIgnore comes in. If you annotate a field with this, it will be ignored in in the class level search.

Finally, you also have the ability to annotate a scoped class to provide settings generated code for that scope. Case in point throughout this ReadMe I have been using the ResultActivity.class scope from the demo. This means all I have to do is annotate the ResultActivity in order to propagate settings to its generated PKBuildResultActivity and PKExtractResultActivity.

@PenKnifeTargetSettings(translateToClass =  Intent.class, createInjectionMethod = true)

By default the generate code will not use a translation class and will create injection methods. What this means for you, even if you annotate an activity you will get a bundle returned to you, in order to save code you simply annotate type of class you wish have the PKBuild return. However this mapping between the bundle and the desired return type is completely up to you. That is the reason for the map method in the PenKnifeHandler class. Here is a snipped from my implementation:

@Override
    public Object map(Bundle container, Class<?> annotatedObject) {
        if (Intent.class.equals(annotatedObject)) {
            Intent intent = new Intent();
            intent.putExtras(container);
            return intent;
        }
        return null; //not implemented
    }

The idea here is to save you these lines of code if you annotate Activities:

Intent intent = new Intent();
intent.putExtras(bundle);

Let me know your thoughts/opinions about this library at my gmail: poborcapatryk or at my Twitter and on if you're doing all that give me a follow on Medium

Thanks!