Friday, March 29, 2019

Android Jetpack Navigation Stable Release

Posted by Ian Lake, Software Engineering Lead & Jisha Abubaker, Product Manager

Cohesive tooling and guidance for implementing predictable in-app navigation

Today we're happy to announce the stable release of the Android Jetpack Navigation component.

The Jetpack Navigation component's suite of libraries, tooling and guidance provides a robust, complete navigation framework, freeing you from the challenges of implementing navigation yourself and giving you certainty that all edge cases are handled correctly.

With the Jetpack Navigation component you can:

  • Handle basic user actions like Up & Back buttons so that they work consistently across devices and screens.
  • Allow users to land on any part of your app via deep links and build consistent and predictable navigation within your app.
  • Improve type safety of arguments passed from one screen to another, decreasing the chances of runtime crashes as users navigate in your app.
  • Add navigation experiences like navigation drawers and bottom navigation consistent with the Material Design guidelines.
  • Visualize and manipulate your navigation flows easily with the Navigation Editor in Android Studio 3.3

The Jetpack Navigation component adheres to the Principles of Navigation, providing consistent and predictable navigation no matter how simple or complex your app may be.

Simplify navigation code with Jetpack Navigation Libraries

The Jetpack Navigation component provides a framework for in-app navigation that makes it possible to abstract away the implementation details, keeping your app code free of navigation boilerplate.

To get started with the Jetpack Navigation component in your project, add the Navigation artifacts available on Google's Maven repository in Java or Kotlin to your app's build.gradle file:

 dependencies {     def nav_version = 2.0.0      // Java     implementation "androidx.navigation:navigation-fragment:$nav_version"     implementation "androidx.navigation:navigation-ui:$nav_version"      // Kotlin KTX      implementation "androidx.navigation:navigation-fragment-ktx:$nav_version"     implementation "androidx.navigation:navigation-ui-ktx:$nav_version"   }

Note: If you have not yet migrated to androidx.*, the Jetpack Navigation stable component libraries are also available as android.arch.* artifacts in version 1.0.0.

navigation-runtime : This core library powers the navigation graph, which provides the structure of your in-app navigation: the screens or destinations that make up your app and the actions that link them. You can control how you navigate to destinations with a simple navigate() call. These destinations may be fragments, activities or custom destinations.

navigation-fragment: This library builds upon navigation-runtime and provides out-of-the-box support for fragments as destinations. With this library, fragment transactions are now handled for you automatically.

navigation-ui: This library allows you to easily add navigation drawers, menus and bottom navigation to your app consistent with the Material Design guidelines.

Each of these libraries provide an Android KTX artifact with the -ktx suffix that builds upon the Java API, taking advantage of Kotlin-specific language features.

Tools to help you build predictable navigation workflows

Available in Android Studio 3.3 and above, the Navigation Editor lets you visually create your navigation graph , allowing you to manage user journeys within your app.

With integration into the manifest merger tool, Android Studio can automatically generate the intent filters necessary to enable deep linking to a specific screen in your app. With this feature, you can associate URLs with any screen of your app by simply setting an attribute on the navigation destination.

Navigation often requires passing data from one screen to another. For example, your list screen may pass an item ID to a details screen. Many of the runtime exceptions during navigation have been attributed to a lack of type safety guarantees as you pass arguments. These exceptions are hard to replicate and debug. Learn how you can provide compile time type safety with the Safe Args Gradle Plugin.

Guidance to get it right on the first try

Check out our brand new set of developer guides that encompass best practices to help you implement navigation correctly:

What developers say

Here's what Emery Coxe, Android Lead @ HomeAway, has to say about the Jetpack Navigation component :

"The Navigation library is well-designed and fully configurable, allowing us to integrate the library according to our specific needs.

With the Navigation Library, we refactored our legacy navigation drawer to support a dynamic, runtime-based configuration using custom views. It allowed us to add / remove new screens to the top-level experience of our app without creating any interdependencies between discreetly packaged modules.

We were also able to get rid of all anti-patterns in our app around top-level navigation, removing explicit casts and hardcoded assumptions to instead rely directly on Navigation. This library is a fundamental component of modern Android development, and we intend to adopt it more broadly across our app moving forward.

Get started

Check out the migration guide and the developer guide to learn how you can get started using the Jetpack Navigation component in your app. We also offer a hands-on codelab and a sample app.

Also check out Google's Digital Wellbeing to see another real-world example of in-app navigation using the Android Jetpack Navigation component.

Feedback

Please continue to tell us about your experience with the Navigation component. If you have specific feedback on features or if you run into any issues, please file a bug via one of the following links:

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