ºÝºÝߣshows by User: DannyPreussler / http://www.slideshare.net/images/logo.gif ºÝºÝߣshows by User: DannyPreussler / Thu, 28 Jun 2018 06:36:23 GMT ºÝºÝߣShare feed for ºÝºÝߣshows by User: DannyPreussler To inject or not to inject - Dependency injection in a Kotlin world (Droidcon Berlin) /slideshow/to-inject-or-not-to-inject-dependency-injection-in-a-kotlin-world-droidcon-berlin/103397875 toinjectdroidconuploadable-180628063624
Dependency Injection via frameworks like Dagger were present in most modern Android projects. But then Kotlin happened. And since then a bunch of new libraries like Koin or Kodein appeared. Developers are even writing articles how to do DI without any framework. Some argue that those don’t even offer real dependency injection. Let’s look at that argument and compare the approaches. So is there something wrong with Dagger & co. in Kotlin? Are they obsolete? What are the alternatives? ]]>

Dependency Injection via frameworks like Dagger were present in most modern Android projects. But then Kotlin happened. And since then a bunch of new libraries like Koin or Kodein appeared. Developers are even writing articles how to do DI without any framework. Some argue that those don’t even offer real dependency injection. Let’s look at that argument and compare the approaches. So is there something wrong with Dagger & co. in Kotlin? Are they obsolete? What are the alternatives? ]]>
Thu, 28 Jun 2018 06:36:23 GMT /slideshow/to-inject-or-not-to-inject-dependency-injection-in-a-kotlin-world-droidcon-berlin/103397875 DannyPreussler@slideshare.net(DannyPreussler) To inject or not to inject - Dependency injection in a Kotlin world (Droidcon Berlin) DannyPreussler Dependency Injection via frameworks like Dagger were present in most modern Android projects. But then Kotlin happened. And since then a bunch of new libraries like Koin or Kodein appeared. Developers are even writing articles how to do DI without any framework. Some argue that those don’t even offer real dependency injection. Let’s look at that argument and compare the approaches. So is there something wrong with Dagger & co. in Kotlin? Are they obsolete? What are the alternatives? <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/toinjectdroidconuploadable-180628063624-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Dependency Injection via frameworks like Dagger were present in most modern Android projects. But then Kotlin happened. And since then a bunch of new libraries like Koin or Kodein appeared. Developers are even writing articles how to do DI without any framework. Some argue that those don’t even offer real dependency injection. Let’s look at that argument and compare the approaches. So is there something wrong with Dagger &amp; co. in Kotlin? Are they obsolete? What are the alternatives?
To inject or not to inject - Dependency injection in a Kotlin world (Droidcon Berlin) from Danny Preussler
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