Reputation: 3425
I want to pass a parcelable object (BluetoothDevice
) to a composable using compose navigation.
Passing primitive types is easy:
composable(
"profile/{userId}",
arguments = listOf(navArgument("userId") { type = NavType.StringType })
) {...}
navController.navigate("profile/user1234")
But I can't pass a parcelable object in the route unless I can serialize it to a string.
composable(
"deviceDetails/{device}",
arguments = listOf(navArgument("device") { type = NavType.ParcelableType(BluetoothDevice::class.java) })
) {...}
val device: BluetoothDevice = ...
navController.navigate("deviceDetails/$device")
The code above obviously doesn't work because it just implicitly calls toString()
.
Is there a way to either serialize a Parcelable
to a String
so I can pass it in the route or pass the navigation argument as an object with a function other than navigate(route: String)
?
Upvotes: 58
Views: 47281
Reputation: 3131
Now you can pass any complex data using Kotlin Serialization officially. Here are some example code:
// Route
@Serializable
data class User(
val id: Int,
val name: String
)
// Pass data
navController.navigate(
User(id = 1, name = "John Doe")
)
// Receive Data
NavHost {
composable<User> { backStackEntry ->
val user: User = backStackEntry.toRoute()
UserDetailsScreen(user) // Here UserDetailsScreen is a composable.
}
}
// Composable view
@Composable
fun UserDetailsScreen(
user: User
){
// ...
}
For more information check out the official blog post from here.
The backStackEntry solution given by @nglauber will not work if we pop up (popUpTo(...)
) back stacks on navigate(...)
.
So here is another solution. We can pass the object by converting it to a JSON string.
Example code:
val ROUTE_USER_DETAILS = "user-details?user={user}"
// Pass data (I am using Moshi here)
val user = User(id = 1, name = "John Doe") // User is a data class.
val moshi = Moshi.Builder().build()
val jsonAdapter = moshi.adapter(User::class.java).lenient()
val userJson = jsonAdapter.toJson(user)
navController.navigate(
ROUTE_USER_DETAILS.replace("{user}", userJson)
)
// Receive Data
NavHost {
composable(ROUTE_USER_DETAILS) { backStackEntry ->
val userJson = backStackEntry.arguments?.getString("user")
val moshi = Moshi.Builder().build()
val jsonAdapter = moshi.adapter(User::class.java).lenient()
val userObject = jsonAdapter.fromJson(userJson)
UserDetailsScreen(userObject) // Here UserDetailsScreen is a composable.
}
}
// Composable function/view
@Composable
fun UserDetailsScreen(
user: User
){
// ...
}
Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 9643
Following code works for me for passing Parcelable argument with compose navigation:
composable(BottomNavigationScreens.SocialNetwork.route) {
...
onNavigateToRecipeDetailScreen = {
navController.currentBackStackEntry?.savedStateHandle?.set("recipe", it)
navController.navigate(BottomNavigationScreens.RecipeDetails.route)
}
}
composable(BottomNavigationScreens.RecipeDetails.route) { backStackEntry ->
val recipe = navController.previousBackStackEntry?.savedStateHandle?.get<Recipe>("recipe")
...
}
In this approach, you set the Recipe object in the savedStateHandle of the current back stack entry using savedStateHandle?.set("recipe", it)
and then navigate to the "recipe_detail" destination using navController.navigate(BottomNavigationScreens.RecipeDetails.route)
navController.previousBackStackEntry?.savedStateHandle?.get<Recipe>("recipe")
to get the Recipe object.
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 433
I've come up with this solution:
fun NavController.navigate(
route: String,
args: Bundle,
navOptions: NavOptions? = null,
navigatorExtras: Navigator.Extras? = null
) {
val nodeId = graph.findNode(route = route)?.id
if (nodeId != null) {
navigate(nodeId, args, navOptions, navigatorExtras)
}
}
This identifies the registered route by ID in the nav graph, completely bypasses the deep link mechanism and falls back to the original approach.
Register your route in the NavGraphBuilder like this:
composable(
route = "MyRoute",
) {
MyScreen(
navController = navController,
myArgument = it.arguments?.getParcelable("myParcelableArg")
)
}
And navigate like this:
navController.navigate(
route = "MyRoute",
args = bundleOf(
"myParcelableArg" to MyParcelable()
)
)
Upvotes: 13
Reputation: 79
args: Bundle?
parameterval destination = navController.graph.findNode("YOUR_ROUTE")
if (destination != null) {
navController.navigate(
destination.id,
bundleOf("key" to value)
)
}
Upvotes: 7
Reputation: 41
I get a weird bug when I implement the top answer to this question. Like I have the following Parcelable to pass between two screens of my Jetpack Compose app:
@Parcelize
data class EdgeParcelable(
val node: NodeParcelable?,
val cursor: String?,
) : Parcelable
And as the accepted Answer says I have implemented a custom NavType:
class EdgeParcelableType : NavType<EdgeParcelable>(isNullableAllowed = false) {
override val name: String
get() = "edge"
override fun get(bundle: Bundle, key: String): EdgeParcelable? {
return bundle.getParcelable(key)
}
override fun parseValue(value: String): EdgeParcelable {
return Gson().fromJson(value, EdgeParcelable::class.java)
}
override fun put(bundle: Bundle, key: String, value: EdgeParcelable) {
bundle.putParcelable(key, value)
}
}
And in my Composable function where I create the NavHost I have:
@Composable
fun MyApp(viewModel: MyViewModel, modifier: Modifier = Modifier) {
val navController = rememberNavController()
Scaffold(
modifier = modifier.fillMaxSize(),
topBar = { MyTopAppBar(
currentScreen=currentScreen,
canNavigateBack = navController.previousBackStackEntry != null,
navigateUp = { navController.navigateUp() }
) }
) { innerPadding ->
NavHost(
navController = navController,
startDestination = "home",
modifier = Modifier.padding(innerPadding)
) {
composable(route = "home") {
val lazyPagingItems = viewModel.Items()
HomeScreen(
lazyPagingItems = lazyPagingItems,
onTownClicked = { edge: EdgeParcelable ->
val json = Uri.encode(Gson().toJson(edgeParcelable))
navController.navigateSingleTopTo("hotspots/$json")
},
modifier = ...
)
}
composable(
route = "hotspots/{edge}",
arguments = listOf(
navArgument("edge") {
type = EdgeParcelableType()
}
)
) {
val edgeParcelable = it.arguments?.getParcelable<EdgeParcelable>("edge")
HotspotsScreen(edgeParcelable)
}
}
}
}
The code above crashes my Application when I add the lines:
val bsEntry by navController.currentBackStackEntryAsState()
val currentScreen = bsEntry?.destination?.route ?: "Home"
Adding the above lines make the Composable become:
@Composable
fun MyApp(viewModel: MyViewModel, modifier: Modifier = Modifier) {
val navController = rememberNavController()
// Adding these causes a problem...
val bsEntry by navController.currentBackStackEntryAsState()
val currentScreen = bsEntry?.destination?.route ?: "Home"
Scaffold(
modifier = modifier.fillMaxSize(),
topBar = { MyTopAppBar(
currentScreen=currentScreen,
canNavigateBack = navController.previousBackStackEntry != null,
navigateUp = { navController.navigateUp() }
) }
) { innerPadding ->
NavHost(
navController = navController,
startDestination = "home",
modifier = Modifier.padding(innerPadding)
) {
composable(route = "home") {
val lazyPagingItems = viewModel.Items()
HomeScreen(
lazyPagingItems = lazyPagingItems,
onTownClicked = { edge: EdgeParcelable ->
val json = Uri.encode(Gson().toJson(edgeParcelable))
navController.navigateSingleTopTo("hotspots/$json")
},
modifier = ...
)
}
composable(
route = "hotspots/{edge}",
arguments = listOf(
navArgument("edge") {
type = EdgeParcelableType()
}
)
) {
val edgeParcelable = it.arguments?.getParcelable<EdgeParcelable>("edge")
HotspotsScreen(edgeParcelable)
}
}
}
}
Passing my Custom NavType with the following line of code:
arguments = listOf(navArgument("edge") { type = EdgeParcelableType() } )
now crashes my app, by rendering it unusable. The app seems to choke on itself, almost like, the Navigation API does not really understand the new Custom EdgeParcleableType()
or perhaps something is missing that remains to be added to make this EdgeParcelableType
work well with the Navigation API.
I was only able to solve the problem by changing the type above to StringType as follows:
arguments = listOf( navArgument("edge") { type = NavType.StringType }
And passing around strings in the rest of the Composable as follows:
@Composable
fun MyApp(viewModel: MyViewModel, modifier: Modifier = Modifier) {
val navController = rememberNavController()
// Using NavType.StringType allows this work...
val bsEntry by navController.currentBackStackEntryAsState()
val currentScreen = bsEntry?.destination?.route ?: "Home"
Scaffold(
modifier = modifier.fillMaxSize(),
topBar = { MyTopAppBar(
currentScreen=currentScreen,
canNavigateBack = navController.previousBackStackEntry != null,
navigateUp = { navController.navigateUp() }
) }
) { innerPadding ->
NavHost(
navController = navController,
startDestination = "home",
modifier = Modifier.padding(innerPadding)
) {
composable(route = "home") {
val lazyPagingItems = viewModel.Items()
HomeScreen(
lazyPagingItems = lazyPagingItems,
onTownClicked = { edge: EdgeParcelable ->
val json = Uri.encode(Gson().toJson(edgeParcelable))
navController.navigateSingleTopTo("hotspots/$json")
},
modifier = ...
)
}
composable(
route = "hotspots/{edge}",
arguments = listOf( navArgument("edge") {
type = NavType.StringType
}
)
) {
val edgeParcelable = Gson().fromJson(Uri.decode(it.arguments?.getString("edge")), EdgeParcelable::class.java)
HotspotsScreen(edgeParcelable)
}
}
}
}
Then my app worked like a Charm. Sorting this took me like 2 days of trial and error and searching so I hope this can help someone out there if faced with a similar issue...
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 45
1 - Add the name of the data sent in the route
const val NEWS_DETAILS = "NEWS_DETAILS/{article}/{name}"
2 - Create dataClassParcelable
@Parcelize
data class ArticlesModel(
@SerializedName("author")
val author: String?,
@SerializedName("content")
val content: String?,
@SerializedName("description")
val description: String?,
@SerializedName("publishedAt")
val publishedAt: String?,
@SerializedName("source")
val source: Strins?,
@SerializedName("title")
val title: String?,
@SerializedName("url")
val url: String?,
@SerializedName("urlToImage")
val urlToImage: String?
):Parcelable
3 - Submit the required data
fun NavController.openNewsDetails(article: ArticlesModel,name:String) {
currentBackStackEntry?.savedStateHandle?.apply{
set(
"article",
article
)
set(
"name",
name
)
}
navigate(ScreenConst.NEWS_DETAILS)
}
4 - Reading information and sending them to a new screen
composable(
route = ScreenConst.NEWS_DETAILS
) { navBackStackEntry ->
val article =
navController.previousBackStackEntry?.savedStateHandle?.get<ArticlesModel("article")
val name=
navController.previousBackStackEntry?.savedStateHandle?.get<String>("name")
if (article==null && name.isNullOrEmpty()) {
return@composable
}
DetailsScreen(
article = article,
name = name
)
}
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 7
You can use my own solution: https://github.com/usmonie/compose_navigation_with_parcelable_arguments
With my solution, you will be able to get parcelable values directly into the composable function
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 2028
you can pass an argument like this
val data = DetailScreenArgument(title = "Sample")
navController.currentBackStackEntry?.savedStateHandle?.apply {
set("detailArgument", data)
}
navController.navigate(Screen.DetailScreen.route)
and get the argument in the destination like this
val detailArgument = navController.previousBackStackEntry?.savedStateHandle?.get<DetailScreenArgument>(
"detailArgument"
)
Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 23894
Warning: Ian Lake is an Android Developer Advocate and he says in this answer that pass complex data structures is an anti-pattern (referring the documentation). He works on this library, so he has authority on this. Use the approach below by your own.
Edit: Updated to Compose Navigation 2.4.0-beta07
Seems like previous solution is not supported anymore. Now you need to create a custom NavType
.
Let's say you have a class like:
@Parcelize
data class Device(val id: String, val name: String) : Parcelable
Then you need to define a NavType
class AssetParamType : NavType<Device>(isNullableAllowed = false) {
override fun get(bundle: Bundle, key: String): Device? {
return bundle.getParcelable(key)
}
override fun parseValue(value: String): Device {
return Gson().fromJson(value, Device::class.java)
}
override fun put(bundle: Bundle, key: String, value: Device) {
bundle.putParcelable(key, value)
}
}
Notice that I'm using Gson
to convert the object to a JSON string. But you can use the conversor that you prefer...
Then declare your composable like this:
NavHost(...) {
composable("home") {
Home(
onClick = {
val device = Device("1", "My device")
val json = Uri.encode(Gson().toJson(device))
navController.navigate("details/$json")
}
)
}
composable(
"details/{device}",
arguments = listOf(
navArgument("device") {
type = AssetParamType()
}
)
) {
val device = it.arguments?.getParcelable<Device>("device")
Details(device)
}
}
Original answer
Basically you can do the following:
// In the source screen...
navController.currentBackStackEntry?.arguments =
Bundle().apply {
putParcelable("bt_device", device)
}
navController.navigate("deviceDetails")
And in the details screen...
val device = navController.previousBackStackEntry
?.arguments?.getParcelable<BluetoothDevice>("bt_device")
Upvotes: 73
Reputation: 874
My approach with Moshi
:
Routes
sealed class Route(
private val route: String,
val Key: String = "",
) {
object Main : Route(route = "main")
object Profile : Route(route = "profile", Key = "user")
override fun toString(): String {
return when {
Key.isNotEmpty() -> "$route/{$Key}"
else -> route
}
}
}
Extension
import android.net.Uri
import androidx.compose.runtime.Composable
import androidx.compose.runtime.remember
import androidx.core.net.toUri
import androidx.navigation.*
import com.squareup.moshi.Moshi
inline fun <reified T> NavController.navigate(
route: String,
data: Pair<String, T>,
navOptions: NavOptions? = null,
navigatorExtras: Navigator.Extras? = null,
) {
val count = route
.split("{${data.first}}")
.size
.dec()
if (count != 1) {
throw IllegalArgumentException()
}
val out = Moshi.Builder()
.build()
.adapter(T::class.java)
.toJson(data.second)
val newRoute = route.replace(
oldValue = "{${data.first}}",
newValue = Uri.encode(out),
)
navigate(
request = NavDeepLinkRequest.Builder
.fromUri(NavDestination.createRoute(route = newRoute).toUri())
.build(),
navOptions = navOptions,
navigatorExtras = navigatorExtras,
)
}
inline fun <reified T> NavBackStackEntry.getData(key: String): T? {
val data = arguments?.getString(key)
return when {
data != null -> Moshi.Builder()
.build()
.adapter(T::class.java)
.fromJson(data)
else -> null
}
}
@Composable
inline fun <reified T> NavBackStackEntry.rememberGetData(key: String): T? {
return remember { getData<T>(key) }
}
Example usage
data class User(
val id: Int,
val name: String,
)
@Composable
fun RootNavGraph() {
val navController = rememberNavController()
NavHost(
navController = navController,
startDestination = "${Route.Main}",
) {
composable(
route = "${Route.Main}",
) {
Button(
onClick = {
navController.navigate(
route = "${Route.Profile}",
data = Route.Profile.Key to User(id = 1000, name = "John Doe"),
)
},
content = { Text(text = "Go to Profile") },
}
composable(
route = "${Route.Profile}",
arguments = listOf(
navArgument(name = Route.Profile.Key) { type = NavType.StringType },
),
) { entry ->
val user = entry.rememberGetData<User>(key = Route.Profile.Key)
Text(text = "$user")
}
}
}
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 452
A very simple and basic way to do is as below
1.First create the parcelable object that you want to pass e.g
@Parcelize
data class User(
val name: String,
val phoneNumber:String
) : Parcelable
2.Then in the current composable that you are in e.g main screen
val userDetails = UserDetails(
name = "emma",
phoneNumber = "1234"
)
)
navController.currentBackStackEntry?.arguments?.apply {
putParcelable("userDetails",userDetails)
}
navController.navigate(Destination.DetailsScreen.route)
3.Then in the details composable, make sure you pass to it a navcontroller as an parameter e.g.
@Composable
fun Details (navController:NavController){
val data = remember {
mutableStateOf(navController.previousBackStackEntry?.arguments?.getParcelable<UserDetails>("userDetails")!!)
}
}
N.B: If the parcelable is not passed into state, you will receive an error when navigating back
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 16614
Here's my version of using the BackStackEntry
Usage:
composable("your_route") { entry ->
AwesomeScreen(entry.requiredArg("your_arg_key"))
}
navController.navigate("your_route", "your_arg_key" to yourArg)
Extensions:
fun NavController.navigate(route: String, vararg args: Pair<String, Parcelable>) {
navigate(route)
requireNotNull(currentBackStackEntry?.arguments).apply {
args.forEach { (key: String, arg: Parcelable) ->
putParcelable(key, arg)
}
}
}
inline fun <reified T : Parcelable> NavBackStackEntry.requiredArg(key: String): T {
return requireNotNull(arguments) { "arguments bundle is null" }.run {
requireNotNull(getParcelable(key)) { "argument for $key is null" }
}
}
Upvotes: 7
Reputation: 3943
Since the nglauber's answer work when going forward and does not when navigating backward and you get a null. I thought maybe at least for the time being we can save the passed argument using remember in our composable and be hopeful that they add the Parcelable argument type to the navigating with the route.
the destination composable target:
composable("yourRout") { backStackEntry ->
backStackEntry.arguments?.let {
val rememberedProject = remember { mutableStateOf<Project?>(null) }
val project =
navController.previousBackStackEntry?.arguments?.getParcelable(
PROJECT_ARGUMENT_KEY
) ?: rememberedProject.value
rememberedProject.value = project
TargetScreen(
project = project ?: throw IllegalArgumentException("parcelable was null"),
)
}
And here's the the source code: to trigger the navigation:
navController.currentBackStackEntry?.arguments =
Bundle().apply {
putParcelable(PROJECT_ARGUMENT_KEY, project)
}
navController.navigate("yourRout")
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 814
I've written a small extension for the NavController.
import android.os.Bundle
import androidx.core.net.toUri
import androidx.navigation.*
fun NavController.navigate(
route: String,
args: Bundle,
navOptions: NavOptions? = null,
navigatorExtras: Navigator.Extras? = null
) {
val routeLink = NavDeepLinkRequest
.Builder
.fromUri(NavDestination.createRoute(route).toUri())
.build()
val deepLinkMatch = graph.matchDeepLink(routeLink)
if (deepLinkMatch != null) {
val destination = deepLinkMatch.destination
val id = destination.id
navigate(id, args, navOptions, navigatorExtras)
} else {
navigate(route, navOptions, navigatorExtras)
}
}
As you can check there are at least 16 functions "navigate" with different parameters, so it's just a converter for use
public open fun navigate(@IdRes resId: Int, args: Bundle?)
So using this extension you can use Compose Navigation without these terrible deep link parameters for arguments at routes.
Upvotes: 37
Reputation: 610
Here is another solution that works also by adding the Parcelable to the correct NavBackStackEntry
, NOT the previous entry. The idea is first to call navController.navigate
, then add the argument to the last NavBackStackEntry.arguments
in the NavController.backQueue
. Be mindful that this does use another library group restricted API (annotated with RestrictTo(LIBRARY_GROUP)
), so could potentially break. Solutions posted by some others use the restricted NavBackStackEntry.arguments
, however NavController.backQueue
is also restricted.
Here are some extensions for the NavController
for navigating and NavBackStackEntry
for retrieving the arguments within the route composable:
fun NavController.navigate(
route: String,
navOptions: NavOptions? = null,
navigatorExtras: Navigator.Extras? = null,
args: List<Pair<String, Parcelable>>? = null,
) {
if (args == null || args.isEmpty()) {
navigate(route, navOptions, navigatorExtras)
return
}
navigate(route, navOptions, navigatorExtras)
val addedEntry: NavBackStackEntry = backQueue.last()
val argumentBundle: Bundle = addedEntry.arguments ?: Bundle().also {
addedEntry.arguments = it
}
args.forEach { (key, arg) ->
argumentBundle.putParcelable(key, arg)
}
}
inline fun <reified T : Parcelable> NavController.navigate(
route: String,
navOptions: NavOptions? = null,
navigatorExtras: Navigator.Extras? = null,
arg: T? = null,
) {
if (arg == null) {
navigate(route, navOptions, navigatorExtras)
return
}
navigate(
route = route,
navOptions = navOptions,
navigatorExtras = navigatorExtras,
args = listOf(T::class.qualifiedName!! to arg),
)
}
fun NavBackStackEntry.requiredArguments(): Bundle = arguments ?: throw IllegalStateException("Arguments were expected, but none were provided!")
@Composable
inline fun <reified T : Parcelable> NavBackStackEntry.rememberRequiredArgument(
key: String = T::class.qualifiedName!!,
): T = remember {
requiredArguments().getParcelable<T>(key) ?: throw IllegalStateException("Expected argument with key: $key of type: ${T::class.qualifiedName!!}")
}
@Composable
inline fun <reified T : Parcelable> NavBackStackEntry.rememberArgument(
key: String = T::class.qualifiedName!!,
): T? = remember {
arguments?.getParcelable(key)
}
To navigate with a single argument, you can now do this in the scope of a NavGraphBuilder
:
composable(route = "screen_1") {
Button(
onClick = {
navController.navigate(
route = "screen_2",
arg = MyParcelableArgument(whatever = "whatever"),
)
}
) {
Text("goto screen 2")
}
}
composable(route = "screen_2") { entry ->
val arg: MyParcelableArgument = entry.rememberRequiredArgument()
// TODO: do something with arg
}
Or if you want to pass multiple arguments of the same type:
composable(route = "screen_1") {
Button(
onClick = {
navController.navigate(
route = "screen_2",
args = listOf(
"arg_1" to MyParcelableArgument(whatever = "whatever"),
"arg_2" to MyParcelableArgument(whatever = "whatever"),
),
)
}
) {
Text("goto screen 2")
}
}
composable(route = "screen_2") { entry ->
val arg1: MyParcelableArgument = entry.rememberRequiredArgument(key = "arg_1")
val arg2: MyParcelableArgument = entry.rememberRequiredArgument(key = "arg_2")
// TODO: do something with args
}
The key benefit of this approach is that similar to the answer that uses Moshi to serialise the argument, it will work when popUpTo
is used in the navOptions
, but will also be more efficient as no JSON serialisation is involved.
This will of course not work with deep links, but it will survive process or activity recreation. For cases where you need to support deep links or even just optional arguments to navigation routes, you can use the entry.rememberArgument
extension. Unlike entry.rememberRequiredArgument
, it will return null instead of throwing an IllegalStateException
.
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 2488
Following nglauber
suggestion, I've created two extensions which are helping me a bit
@Suppress("UNCHECKED_CAST")
fun <T> NavHostController.getArgument(name: String): T {
return previousBackStackEntry?.arguments?.getSerializable(name) as? T
?: throw IllegalArgumentException()
}
fun NavHostController.putArgument(name: String, arg: Serializable?) {
currentBackStackEntry?.arguments?.putSerializable(name, arg)
}
And I use them this way:
Source:
navController.putArgument(NavigationScreens.Pdp.Args.game, game)
navController.navigate(NavigationScreens.Pdp.route)
Destination:
val game = navController.getArgument<Game>(NavigationScreens.Pdp.Args.game)
PdpScreen(game)
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 422
I had a similar issue where I had to pass a string that contains slashes, and since they are used as separators for deep link arguments I could not do that. Escaping them didn't seem "clean" to me.
I came up with the following workaround, which can be easily tweaked for your case. I rewrote NavHost
, NavController.createGraph
and NavGraphBuilder.composable
from androidx.navigation.compose
as follows:
@Composable
fun NavHost(
navController: NavHostController,
startDestination: Screen,
route: String? = null,
builder: NavGraphBuilder.() -> Unit
) {
NavHost(navController, remember(route, startDestination, builder) {
navController.createGraph(startDestination, route, builder)
})
}
fun NavController.createGraph(
startDestination: Screen,
route: String? = null,
builder: NavGraphBuilder.() -> Unit
) = navigatorProvider.navigation(route?.hashCode() ?: 0, startDestination.hashCode(), builder)
fun NavGraphBuilder.composable(
screen: Screen,
content: @Composable (NavBackStackEntry) -> Unit
) {
addDestination(ComposeNavigator.Destination(provider[ComposeNavigator::class], content).apply {
id = screen.hashCode()
})
}
Where Screen is my destination enum
sealed class Screen {
object Index : Screen()
object Example : Screen()
}
Please note that I removed deep links and arguments since I am not using them. That will still allow me to pass and retrieve arguments manually, and that functionality can be re-added, I simply didn't need it for my case.
Say I want Example
to take a string argument path
const val ARG_PATH = "path"
I then initialise the NavHost like so
NavHost(navController, startDestination = Screen.Index) {
composable(Screen.Index) { IndexScreen(::navToExample) }
composable(Screen.Example) { navBackStackEntry ->
navBackStackEntry.arguments?.getString(ARG_PATH)?.let { path ->
ExampleScreen(path, ::navToIndex)
}
}
}
And this is how I navigate to Example
passing path
fun navToExample(path: String) {
navController.navigate(Screen.Example.hashCode(), Bundle().apply {
putString(ARG_PATH, path)
})
}
I am sure that this can be improved, but these were my initial thoughts. To enable deep links, you will need to revert back to using
// composable() and other places
val internalRoute = "android-app://androidx.navigation.compose/$route"
id = internalRoute.hashCode()
Upvotes: 0