Huge News!Announcing our $40M Series B led by Abstract Ventures.Learn More
Socket
Sign inDemoInstall
Socket

io.github.raamcosta.compose-destinations:animations-core

Package Overview
Dependencies
Maintainers
1
Alerts
File Explorer

Advanced tools

Socket logo

Install Socket

Detect and block malicious and high-risk dependencies

Install

io.github.raamcosta.compose-destinations:animations-core

Annotation processing library for type-safe Jetpack Compose navigation with no boilerplate.

  • 1.11.7
  • Source
  • Maven
  • Socket score

Version published
Maintainers
1
Source

⚠️ WARNING - 1.11.3-alpha / 2.1.0-beta02 and above (Compose 1.7)

OR if you got this error kotlinx.serialization.SerializationException: Serializer for class 'DirectionImpl' is not found.

- DO NOT call NavController.navigate function anywhere

With the introduction of type safe APIs on the official library, our NavController extension functions that received Direction are now shadowed by new member functions on NavController.
This means that the official member function would be called instead of our extension functions, and so we removed those extension functions.
Instead, always make sure to use DestinationsNavigator. You can get one of such navigators by:

  • If inside a specific screen:
    • Simply receive a DestinationsNavigator instead of NavController in your annotated screens.
  • If navigating on top level (such as around DestinationsNavHost, bottom nav bar, etc)
    • navController.rememberDestinationsNavigator() if in a Composable
    • navController.toDestinationsNavigator() if not in a Composable

Read more about these changes here.

- DO NOT depend on jetpack compose navigation directly

Compose Destinations provides the correct version transitively.
So, if you have dependency on androidx.navigation:navigation-compose, please remove it! This has always been true, but more important now.

Maven metadata URL License Apache 2.0 Android API kotlin

Compose Destinations

A KSP library that processes annotations and generates code that uses Official Jetpack Compose Navigation under the hood. It hides the complex, non-type-safe and boilerplate code you would have to write otherwise.
No need to learn a whole new framework to navigate - most APIs are either the same as with the Jetpack Components or inspired by them.

V2 is here! 🙌

Please consider migrating to it and leaving feedback as GH issue or on our slack channel #compose-destinations!

Main features 🧭

  • Typesafe navigation arguments
  • Simple but configurable navigation graphs setup
  • Navigating back with a result in a simple and type-safe way
  • Getting the navigation arguments from the SavedStateHandle (useful in ViewModels) and NavBackStackEntry in a type-safe way.
  • Navigation animations
  • Destination wrappers to allow reusing Compose logic on multiple screens
  • Bottom sheet screens
  • Easy deep linking to screens
  • Wear OS support (since versions 1.x.30!)
  • All you can do with Official Jetpack Compose Navigation but in a simpler safer way!

For a deeper look into all the features, check our documentation website.

Basic Usage 🧑‍💻

[!NOTE]
This readme is about v2. If you're now starting to use Compose Destinations, I strongly recommend using v2. It is currently in beta stage, but we don't expect major issues with it, and soon it will reach stable! If you really want to see basic v1 usage, check it here.

1. Annotate your screen Composables with @Destination<RootGraph>:

@Destination<RootGraph> // sets this as a destination of the "root" nav graph
@Composable
fun ProfileScreen() { /*...*/ }

2. Add navigation arguments to the function declaration:

@Destination<RootGraph>
@Composable
fun ProfileScreen(
   id: Int, // <-- required navigation argument
   groupName: String?, // <-- optional navigation argument
   isOwnUser: Boolean = false // <-- optional navigation argument
) { /*...*/ }

Parcelable, Serializable, Enum and classes annotated with @kotlinx.serialization.Serializable (as well as Arrays and ArrayLists of these) work out of the box! You can also make any other type a navigation argument type. Read about it here

[!TIP]
There is an alternative way to define the destination arguments in case you don't need to use them inside the Composable (as is likely the case when using ViewModel). Read more here.

3. Build the project

Or run ksp task (example: ./gradlew kspDebugKotlin), to generate all the Destinations. With the above annotated composable, a ProfileScreenDestination file would be generated (that we'll use in step 4).

4. Use the generated [ComposableName]Destination's invoke method to navigate to it.

It will have the correct typed arguments.

@Destination<RootGraph>(start = true) // sets this as the start destination of the "root" nav graph
@Composable
fun HomeScreen(
   navigator: DestinationsNavigator
) {
   /*...*/
   navigator.navigate(ProfileScreenDestination(id = 7, groupName = "Kotlin programmers"))
}

5. Finally, add the NavHost call:

DestinationsNavHost(navGraph = NavGraphs.root)

[!NOTE]
NavGraphs is a generated file that contains all navigation graphs. root here corresponds to the <RootGraph> we used in the above examples. You're also able to define your own navigation graphs to use instead of <RootGraph>.

This call adds all annotated Composable functions as destinations of the Navigation Host.

That's it! No need to worry about routes, NavType, bundles and strings. All that redundant and error-prone code gets generated for you.

Setup 🧩

Compose destinations is available via maven central.

1. Add the KSP plugin:

Note: The version you chose for the KSP plugin depends on the Kotlin version your project uses.
You can check https://github.com/google/ksp/releases for the list of KSP versions, then pick the last release that matches your Kotlin version. Example: If you're using 1.9.22 Kotlin version, then the last KSP version is 1.9.22-1.0.17.

groovy - build.gradle(:module-name)
plugins {
    //...
    id 'com.google.devtools.ksp' version '1.9.22-1.0.17' // Depends on your kotlin version
}
kotlin - build.gradle.kts(:module-name)
plugins {
    //...
    id("com.google.devtools.ksp") version "1.9.22-1.0.17" // Depends on your kotlin version
}
2. Add the dependencies:

Compose Destinations has multiple active versions. The higher one uses the latest versions for Compose and Navigation, while the others use only stable versions. Choose the one that matches your Compose version, considering this table:

Compose 1.1 (1.1.x)Maven Central
Compose 1.2 (1.2.x)Maven Central
Compose 1.3 (1.3.x)Maven Central
Compose 1.4 (1.4.x)Maven Central
Compose 1.5 (1.5.x)Maven Central
Compose 1.6 (1.6.x) Maven Central OR Maven Central
Compose 1.7 (1.7.x) Maven Central OR Maven Central

[!WARNING]
If you choose a version that uses a higher version of Compose than the one you're setting for your app, gradle will upgrade your Compose version via transitive dependency.

groovy - build.gradle(:module-name)
implementation 'io.github.raamcosta.compose-destinations:core:<version>'
ksp 'io.github.raamcosta.compose-destinations:ksp:<version>'

// V2 only: for bottom sheet destination support, also add
implementation 'io.github.raamcosta.compose-destinations:bottom-sheet:<version>'
kotlin - build.gradle.kts(:module-name)
implementation("io.github.raamcosta.compose-destinations:core:<version>")
ksp("io.github.raamcosta.compose-destinations:ksp:<version>")

// V2 only: for bottom sheet destination support, also add
implementation("io.github.raamcosta.compose-destinations:bottom-sheet:<version>")

[!NOTE]
If you want to use Compose Destinations in a Wear OS app, replace above core dependency with:
implementation 'io.github.raamcosta.compose-destinations:wear-core:<version>'
this will use Wear Compose Navigation internally.
Read more about the next steps to configure these features here

Community 💬

Please join the community at Kotlin slack channel: #compose-destinations
Ask questions, suggest improvements, or anything else related to the library.

If you like the library, consider starring and sharing it with your colleagues.

FAQs

Package last updated on 10 Oct 2024

Did you know?

Socket

Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.

Install

Related posts

SocketSocket SOC 2 Logo

Product

  • Package Alerts
  • Integrations
  • Docs
  • Pricing
  • FAQ
  • Roadmap
  • Changelog

Packages

npm

Stay in touch

Get open source security insights delivered straight into your inbox.


  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Security

Made with ⚡️ by Socket Inc