Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
779 lines (595 loc) · 36.3 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

779 lines (595 loc) · 36.3 KB

Navigation Components Tutorials

Tutorials for learning Navigation Components starting with simple set up, continues with adding top menus, passing arguments via navigation graphs and combining them with different Material Design widgets such as BottomNavigationView, Toolbar, ViewPager2, TabLayout and dynamic feature module navigation with DynamicNavHostFragment.

Overview

Tutorial Coverage

Covers basic BottomNavigationView and ViewPager usage without any navigatiom components. This is a little bit like warm up before moving to more complex ones including navigation with ViewPager2

Covers how to use create navigation graph nav_graph.xml inside navigation folder, and NavHostFragmentin activity_main.xml layout file.

Note

One important note to add is navigation uses FragmentTransaction.replace() to navigate next fragment inside specified NavHostFragment

    <androidx.fragment.app.FragmentContainerView
        android:id="@+id/nav_host_fragment"
        android:name="androidx.navigation.fragment.NavHostFragment"
        android:layout_width="0dp"
        android:layout_height="0dp"
        app:layout_constraintBottom_toBottomOf="parent"
        app:layout_constraintLeft_toLeftOf="parent"
        app:layout_constraintRight_toRightOf="parent"
        app:layout_constraintTop_toTopOf="parent"

        app:defaultNavHost="true"
        app:navGraph="@navigation/nav_graph" />

There are multiple ways to navigate from one fragment to another using a NavController, for instance


buttonCenter?.setOnClickListener {

    val options = navOptions {
        anim {
            enter = R.anim.slide_in_right
            exit = R.anim.slide_out_left
            popEnter = R.anim.slide_in_left
            popExit = R.anim.slide_out_right
        }
    }

    findNavController().navigate(R.id.middle1_dest, null, options)
}

Check out this tutorial if you wish to get familiar with basic consepts, animation and navigating with popUpToand popUpToInclusive

Uses seperate and nested fragments with each it's own navigation graph.

nav_graph is the main graph for navigation has navigation to CameraFragment or other graphs such as nav_graph_dashboard or nav_graph_home Nested graphs are part of the same navHostFragment?.childFragmentManager

Covers how nested graphs with their own back stack or NavHostFragment work. You can check out both main and home childFragmentManager back stack entry and fragment count by examining Toast or log messages.

Note

Main graph back stack is controlled by NavHostFragment.getChildFragmentManager

When a nested navigation graph or NavHostFragment is added it's back stack is retrieved using a childFragmentManager.

When a fragment is from a nested navigation graph is on screen when you navigate back or forth it's current position changes only for the current NavHostFragment, main back stack does not change.

val callback = object : OnBackPressedCallback(false) {

   override fun handleOnBackPressed() {

       // Get NavHostFragment
       val navHostFragment =
           childFragmentManager.findFragmentById(nestedNavHostFragmentId)
       // ChildFragmentManager of the current NavHostFragment
       val navHostChildFragmentManager = navHostFragment?.childFragmentManager

       // Check if it's the root of nested fragments in this navhosts
       if (navController?.currentDestination?.id == navController?.graph?.startDestination) {

           /*
               Disable this callback because calls OnBackPressedDispatcher
                gets invoked  calls this callback  gets stuck in a loop
            */
           isEnabled = false
           requireActivity().onBackPressed()
           isEnabled = true

       } else if (isVisible) {
           navController?.navigateUp()
       }

   }
}

Note

Back navigation does NOT work for the first fragment in back stack of HomeNavHostFragment for this example, because

if (navController!!.currentDestination == null || navController!!.currentDestination!!.id == navController!!.graph.startDestination) {
   navController?.navigate(R.id.homeFragment1)
}

and start destination is HomeNavHostFragmentitself , but last fragment, currentDestination on graph is HomeFragment1 when back button is pressed while HomeFragment2 is on screen.

Change app:startDestination="@id/home_dest" to app:startDestination="@id/homeFragment1" to solve back press issue for HomeNavHostFragment, it's just set to demonstrate how start destination change back press.

<navigation xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
      xmlns:app="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res-auto"
      xmlns:tools="http://schemas.android.com/tools"
      android:id="@+id/nav_graph_home"
      app:startDestination="@id/home_dest">

  <fragment
          android:id="@+id/home_dest"
          android:name="com.smarttoolfactory.tutorial1_3navigation_nestednavhost.navhost.HomeNavHostFragment"
          android:label="HomeHost"
          tools:layout="@layout/fragment_navhost_home" />

  <fragment
          android:id="@+id/homeFragment1"
          android:name="com.smarttoolfactory.tutorial1_3navigation_nestednavhost.blankfragment.HomeFragment1"
          android:label="HomeFragment1"
          tools:layout="@layout/fragment_home1">

  </fragment>

</navigation>

Navigation Architecture

MainActivity (Appbar + Toolbar)
|- MainNavHost
    |
    | FragmentViewPagerContainer(ViewPager2 + TabLayout)
        |- HomeFragment1 -> HomeFragment2 -> HomeFragment3
        |- DashboardFragment1 -> DashboardFragment2 -> DashboardFragment3

Covers how to create a ViewPager2with navigation in main back stack, in this example ViewPager2pages do not have their own back stacks. It's covered in tutorial Tutorial6-2.

Same as previous tutorial except only with one difference, data binding is used for binding.

Note

Data binding that is not null(or non-nullable) after Fragment.onDestroyView when ViewPager2is inside a fragment causing leak canary to show data binding related MEMORY LEAK for this fragment when used in ViewPager2. Also you need to set adapter of ViewPager2 either to prevent memory leaks, and another one is due to TabLayouts which is covered in later sections. Check out this stackoverflow question for more details.

Navigation Architecture


 MainActivity (Appbar + Toolbar)
    |- MainNavHost
       |
       |- ViewPagerContainerFragment(ViewPager2 + TabLayout)
       |   |- HomeNavHostFragment
       |   |  |- HF1 -> HF2 -> HF3
       |   |
       |   |- DashboardNavHostFragment
       |   |  |- DF1 -> DF2 -> DF3
       |   |
       |   |- NotificationHostFragment
       |   |  |- NF1 -> NF2 -> NF3
       |   |
       |   |-LoginFragment1
       |
       |- LoginFragment1 -> LoginFragment2

Covers ViewPager2 and it's pages each with it's own back stack or navigation graphs.

NavHostFragment use NavController to navigate back/forth in any page.

Note

This tutorial has very important aspects for ViewPager2 navigation

  1. Creating NavHostFragment for each page and can navigate inside them, each page has it's own nav graph.

    in each layout file NavHostFragment inside is retrieved using

            val nestedNavHostFragment =
                childFragmentManager.findFragmentById(nestedNavHostFragmentId) as? NavHostFragment
            navController = nestedNavHostFragment?.navController`
    

    HomeNavHostFragment uses the first fragment that is displayed on screen **HomeFragment1 while DashboardNavHostFragment uses graph with itself as start destination so it should check for the NavController.getCurrentDestination() to navigate to it when device rotated

    LoginFragment1 is added to main graph, because of that appbar back navigation only works with the ViewPagerContainerFragment's NavController

  2. How to use back navigation with OnBackPressedCallback, there is an alternative and more simple way to handle back navigation for ViewPager2 but this also a way to keep in mind if more customization is required. If you do not handle back navigation Activity's back press gets called and application starts from onCreate.

  3. Checking out memory leaks with data binding, ViewPager2 adapter and lifecylce.

    • You should set data binding to null or you will get memory leaks for this ViewPager2 which is itself also inside a fragment

    • You should set ViePager2's adapter to null in onDestroyView

    • 🔥 You should use ChildFragmentStateAdapter(fragmentManager: FragmentManager, lifecycle: Lifecycle), not the one that takes Fragment as parameter. And use view's lifecycle instead of setting Fragment's lifecycle.

    viewPager.adapter =
                       ChildFragmentStateAdapter(childFragmentManager, viewLifecycleOwner.lifecycle)
    

Refer to this stackoverflow question for more details.

Navigation Architecture

 MainActivity(Appbar + Toolbar + TabLayout + ViewPager2)
   |
   |- HomeNavHostFragment
   |  |- HF1 -> HF2 -> HF3
   |
   |- DashboardNavHostFragment
   |  |- DF1 -> DF2 -> DF3
   |
   |- NotificationHostFragment
      |- NF1 -> NF2 -> NF3

In this tutorial MainActivity has it's appbar that navigation is controlled using the NavController retrieved from NavHostFragment via LiveData

Note

There is an issue with rotation, when device rotated ActivityFragmentStateAdapter.createFragment method is not called and it's not possible to access NavController of newly created fragments. If you do not wish to have a rotatable app you can use live data or ViewModel to get current NavController to change appbar title and get other properties of NavController. LiveData is observed in MainActivity to set appbar title

Navigation Architecture

 MainActivity
    |- MainNavHost
       |
       |- ViewPagerContainerFragment(ViewPager)
           |
           |- HomeNavHostFragment(Appbar + Toolbar)
           |  |- HF1 -> HF2 -> HF3
           |
           |- DashboardNavHostFragment(Appbar Toolbar)
           |  |- DF1 -> DF2 -> DF3
           |
           |- NotificationHostFragment(Appbar Toolbar)
              |- NF1 -> NF2 -> NF3

In this tutorial each NavHostFragment has it's own toolbar They can navigate back with back arrow when navigated to an inner/nested fragment in pages of ViewPager

Using FragmentStateAdapter.registerFragmentTransactionCallback with FragmentStateAdapter solves back navigation instead of using OnBackPressedCallback.handleOnBackPressed in every NavHostFragment as answered here

init {
    // Add a FragmentTransactionCallback to handle changing
    // the primary navigation fragment
    registerFragmentTransactionCallback(object : FragmentTransactionCallback() {
        override fun onFragmentMaxLifecyclePreUpdated(
            fragment: Fragment,
            maxLifecycleState: Lifecycle.State
        ) = if (maxLifecycleState == Lifecycle.State.RESUMED) {

            // This fragment is becoming the active Fragment - set it to
            // the primary navigation fragment in the OnPostEventListener
            OnPostEventListener {
                fragment.parentFragmentManager.commitNow {
                    setPrimaryNavigationFragment(fragment)
                }
            }

        } else {
            super.onFragmentMaxLifecyclePreUpdated(fragment, maxLifecycleState)
        }
    })
}

If defaultNavHost is not set to true true for any NavHostFragments by setting app:defaultNavHost="true" in xml or programmatically snippet above will not work.

Navigation Architecture

MainActivity
   |- MainNavHost
      |
      |- ParenNavHost((Appbar + Toolbar)
          |
          |- ViewPagerContainerFragment(ViewPager2)
          |   |
          |   |- HomeNavHostFragment(Appbar + Toolbar)
          |   |  |- HF1 -> HF2 -> HF3
          |   |
          |   |- DashboardNavHostFragment(Appbar + Toolbar)
          |   |  |- DF1 -> DF2 -> DF3
          |   |
          |   |- NotificationHostFragment(Appbar + Toolbar)
          |   |  |- NF1 -> NF2 -> NF3
          |   |
          |   |-LoginFragment1
          |
          |- LoginFragment1 -> LoginFragment2

In this tutorial each NavHostFragment has it's own toolbar, also ParentNavHostFragment has it's own toolbar either.

LoginFragment2 in this example is added to back stack of ParentNavHostFragment because of that it does not have any association with toolbar in ViewPagerContainerFragment

ParentNavHostFragment's role is to have it's own Appbar to contain login fragments and navigate through them using Appbar. Without ParentNavHostFragment we navigate to LoginFragment2 that has no Appbar.

Visibility of ParentNavHostFragment is changed via liveData of AppbarViewModel

However, there is an issue whenever Toolbar that is not belong to fragments appear or disappear.

Navigation Architecture

MainActivity
  |- MainNavHostFragment
     |
     |- ParenNavHostFragment(Appbar + Toolbar) Here because we wish to have toolbar inside Fragment
         |
         |- ViewPagerContainerFragment(TabLayout + ViewPager2)
         |   |
         |   |- HomeNavHostFragment
         |   |  |- HF1 -> HF2 -> HF3
         |   |
         |   |- DashboardNavHostFragment
         |   |  |- DF1 -> DF2 -> DF3
         |   |
         |   |- NotificationHostFragment
         |   |  |- NF1 -> NF2 -> NF3
         |   |
         |   |-LoginFragment1
         |
         |- LoginFragment1 -> LoginFragment2

In this tutorial, only ParentNavHostFragment has Appbar and Toolbar. Navigation of individual NavHostFragments is done via LiveData belong to AppbarViewModel.currentNavController which returns NavController of current NavHostFragment on screen due. Current NavController is set onResume to make sure to set it only when the current fragment is visible, it's instead of checking if fragment is on screen and visible.

ParentNavHostFragment's role is to have it's own Appbar to contain login fragments and navigate through them using Appbar. Without ParentNavHostFragment we navigate to LoginFragment2 that has no Appbar if it's inside ViewPagerContainerFragment.

It can be done by putting Appbar to MainActivity but purpose here is to put Appbar + Toolbar inside a fragment to be able to use with BottomNavigationView for instance

Navigation Architecture

 MainActivity(BottomNavigationView + ViewPager2 + Appbar + Toolbar)
       |- HomeNavHostFragment
       |   |- HF1 -> HF2 -> HF3
       |
       |- DashboardNavHostFragment
       |   |- DF1 -> DF2 -> DF3
       |
       |- NotificationHostFragment
       |   |- NF1 -> NF2 -> NF3

In this example BottomNavigationView selects which page of ViewPager2 should be opened using BottomNavigationView.setOnNavigationItemSelectedListener

Appbar title is changed using LiveData AppbarViewModel.currentNavController of visible NavHostFragment on screen of ViePager2 page

Change current nav controller to set appbar title

appbarViewModel.currentNavController.observe(this, Observer { it ->

    it?.let { event: Event<NavController> ->
        event.getContentIfNotHandled()?.let { navController ->
            val appBarConfig = AppBarConfiguration(navController.graph)
            dataBinding.toolbar.setupWithNavController(navController, appBarConfig)
        }
    }
})

Navigation Architecture

     MainActivity(BottomNavigationView + ViewPager2 + Appbar + Toolbar)
        |
        |- ViewPagerContainerFragment(TabLayout + ViewPager2)
        |      |
        |      |- HomeNavHostFragment
        |      |  |- HF1 -> HF2 -> HF3
        |      |
        |      |- DashboardNavHostFragment
        |      |  |- DF1 -> DF2 -> DF3
        |      |
        |      |- NotificationHostFragment
        |      |  |- NF1 -> NF2 -> NF3
        |      |
        |      |-LoginFragment1
        |
        |- DashboardNavHostFragment
        |   |- DF1 -> DF2 -> DF3
        |
        |- NotificationHostFragment
        |   |- NF1 -> NF2 -> NF3

This example is combination of Tutorial6-6 and Tutorial 7-1

First tab of the BottomNavigationView is ViewPagerContainerFragment which has a ViewPager2 that has it's own pages with each it's own back stack setting NavController is done both using AppbarViewModel and BottomNavigationView.setupWithNavController in the NavigationExtensions code for setting BottomNavigationView back stack.

Navigation Architecture

  MainActivity
    |- MainNavHostFragment
         |
         |- ContainerNavHostFragment(BottomNavigationView  Appbar + Toolbar)
         |    |
         |    |- ViewPagerContainerFragment(ViewPager2 + TabLayout)
         |    |      |
         |    |      |- PostVerticalNavHost
         |    |      |  |- PostVerticalFragment -> PostDetailFragment
         |    |      |
         |    |      |- PostHorizontalNavHost
         |    |      |  |- PostHorizontalFragment -> PostDetailFragment
         |    |      |
         |    |      |- PostGridNavHostFragment
         |    |      |  |- PostGridFragment
         |    |      |
         |    |      |- PostStaggerNavHostFragment
         |    |      |  |- PostStaggeredFragment
         |    |      |
         |    |      |- NotificationHostFragment
         |    |      |  |- NF1 -> NF2 -> NF3
         |    |      |
         |    |      |- LoginFragment1
         |    |
         |    |
         |    |- DashboardNavHostFragment
         |    |   |- DF1 -> DF2 -> DF3
         |    |
         |    |- NotificationHostFragment
         |    |  |- NF1 -> NF2 -> NF3
         |    |
         |    |- &PostGridFragment -> PostDetailFragment
         |    |
         |    |- &LoginFragment1 -> LoginFragment2
         |
         |
         |- &PostStaggeredFragment -> PostDetailFragment

In this tutorial BottomNavigationView is inside MainFragment. MainActivity can navigate to a different fragment other than the MainFragment using nav_graph main destinations.

Navigation is layered, fragments annotated with & display that hey navigate at that level, not actually added to that hierarchy.

For instance, PostStaggeredFragment which is in ViewPager2 calls snippet below to get main NavController to navigate in main navigation graph requireActivity().findNavController(R.id.main_nav_host_fragment).navigate(R.id.action_mainFragment_to_postDetailFragment, bundle)

PostGridFragment which is in ViewPager2 gets PNavControllerP that belong to ViewPagerContainerFragment via parentFragment?.parentFragment?.findNavController() and navigates from ViewPagerContainerFragment to PostDetailFragment

🔥🔥🔥 Important

If you navigate from PostStaggeredFragment to PostDetailFragment fragment you will see that memory leak occurs. It happens due to BottomNavigationView.setupWithNavControllerfunction inNavigationExtensions.ktclass leaking because of listeners not being unregistered in extension functions inonDestroyView``` of fragment.

Check out Tutorial8-2 for solution for this issue

This tutorial to navigate to dynamic feature module from App, navigate from dynamic feature module gallery to favorites.

Steps to create dynamic navigation from app to dynamic feature modules, or from one dynamic feature module to another

  1. Replace android:name="androidx.navigation.fragment.NavHostFragment" with android:name="androidx.navigation.dynamicfeatures.fragment.DynamicNavHostFragment" for the layouts
<androidx.fragment.app.FragmentContainerView
    android:id="@+id/nestedDashboardNavHostFragment"
    android:name="androidx.navigation.dynamicfeatures.fragment.DynamicNavHostFragment"
    app:defaultNavHost="true"
    app:navGraph="@navigation/nav_graph_dashboard"/>
  1. Add dynamic navigation with <include>, <activity> or as fragmentt to any navigation graph
    • You don't have to use an id, but if you do, same id defined here must be used in dynamic feature module, or will get an error.
    • Add package name of dynamic feature module
    • Add nav graph name in navigation folder of dynamic feature module
    • Add module name which is also in app's build.gradle file
    • Optionally add arguments to pass to dynamic feature module fragments
<!-- gallery dynamic feature module-->
<include-dynamic
    android:id="@+id/nav_graph_gallery"
    android:name="com.smarttoolfactory.gallery"
    app:graphResName="nav_graph_gallery"
    app:moduleName="gallery">
    <argument
        android:name="count"
        android:defaultValue="0"
        app:argType="integer" />
</include-dynamic>
  1. In dynamic feature module navigation creata navigation graph to navigate in feature module fragmnent or navigate to other dynamic feature modueles, and passing arguments and getting the result from a fragment with savedStateHandle.
    • id in dynamic feature module should not contain +, because you are using the same id resource defined in app or the snippet above. If you do you will have the error i got here
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<navigation xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
    xmlns:app="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res-auto"
    android:id="@id/nav_graph_gallery"
    app:moduleName="gallery"
    app:startDestination="@id/galleryFragment1">

    <fragment
        android:id="@+id/galleryFragment1"
        android:name="com.smarttoolfactory.gallery.GalleryFragment1"
        android:label="GalleryFragment1">
        <action
            android:id="@+id/action_galleryFragment1_to_galleryFragment2"
            app:destination="@id/galleryFragment2" />
        <action
            android:id="@+id/action_galleryFragment1_to_nav_graph_favorites"
            app:destination="@id/nav_graph_favorites" />
    </fragment>

    <!-- favorite dynamic feature module-->
    <include-dynamic
        android:id="@id/nav_graph_favorites"
        android:name="com.smarttoolfactory.favorites"
        app:graphResName="nav_graph_favorites"
        app:moduleName="favorites" >
        <argument
            android:name="count"
            app:argType="integer"
            android:defaultValue="0" />
    </include-dynamic>
</navigation>

HomeFragment1 listen savedStateHandle with findNavController().currentBackStackEntry?.savedStateHandle.getLiveData<Int>

HomeFragment2 and GalleryFragment sets result with findNavController().previousBackStackEntry?.savedStateHandle?.set("count", count)

Navigation Architecture

  MainActivity
    |- MainNavHostFragment
         |
         |- ContainerNavHostFragment(BottomNavigationView  Appbar + Toolbar)
         |    |
         |    |- ViewPagerContainerFragment(ViewPager2 + TabLayout)
         |    |      |
         |    |      |- PostVerticalNavHost
         |    |      |  |- PostVerticalFragment -> PostDetailFragment
         |    |      |
         |    |      |- PostHorizontalNavHost
         |    |      |  |- PostHorizontalFragment -> PostDetailFragment
         |    |      |
         |    |      |- PostGridNavHostFragment
         |    |      |  |- PostGridFragment
         |    |      |
         |    |      |- PostStaggerNavHostFragment
         |    |      |  |- PostStaggeredFragment
         |    |      |
         |    |      |- NotificationHostFragment
         |    |      |  |- NF1 -> NF2 -> NF3
         |    |      |
         |    |      |- LoginFragment1
         |    |
         |    |
         |    |- DashboardNavHostFragment
         |    |   |- DF1 -> DF2 -> DF3
         |    |
         |    |- NotificationHostFragment
         |    |  |- NF1 -> NF2 -> NF3
         |    |
         |    |- &PostGridFragment -> PostDetailFragment
         |    |
         |    |- &LoginFragment1 -> LoginFragment2
         |    |
         |    |- NF1 | 2F2 -> Camera Dynamic Feature
         |
         |
         |- DF1 | 2F2 -> Photo Dynamic Feature
         |
         |- NF1 | 2F2 -> Camera Dynamic Feature
         |
         |- &PostStaggeredFragment -> PostDetailFragment

         // Photos Dynamic feature navigate to Camera Dynamic feature
         |- Photos Dynamic Feature -> Camera Dynamic Feature

In this tutorial same as Tutorial 7-3 navigation layered, and navigation from app module to dynamic features, or navigation from Photos dynamic feature module to Camera dynamic feature module is available.

There are two versions of main fragment.

One with MainFragment which uses BottomNavigationView extension, and MainFragmentWithViewPager uses ViewPager2 to create back stack of BottomNavigationView.

Note

🔥 Since DynamicNavHostFragment used instead of NavHostFragment another extension should be written that creates fragments that have [DynamicNavHostFragment] in fragments.

If BottomNavigationView extension is used with DynamicNavHostFragment it returns the error below

  Caused by: java.lang.IllegalStateException: Could not find Navigator with name "include-dynamic". You must call NavController.addNavigator() for each navigation type.
     at androidx.navigation.NavigatorProvider.getNavigator(NavigatorProvider.java:98)
     at androidx.navigation.NavInflater.inflate(NavInflater.java:107)
     at androidx.navigation.NavInflater.inflate(NavInflater.java:141)
     at androidx.navigation.NavInflater.inflate(NavInflater.java:88)

Also, since extension is not used, observe that not getting MEMORY LEAK that was present in Tutorial7-3

ToDos:

  • Use nav graph ViewModel by navGraphViewModels, couldn't find it yet
  • Solve setFragmentResultListener issue to get result from a framgent on back press, and use instead of savedStateHandle
  • Use saveStateHandle or save fragment state in Tutorial 8-2 when ViewPager2 moves away from viewPort
  • There is a performance issue in Tutorial 8-2 when navigate back from StaggerPostListFragment, or navigating back to fragment main
  • Use BottomNavigationView extension with DynamicNavHostFragment, or create another extension for dynamic feature modules