Stock is a dart package for loading data from both remote and local sources. It is inspired by the Store Kotlin library.
Its main goal is to prevent excessive calls to the network and disk cache. By utilizing it, you eliminate the possibility of flooding your network with the same request while, at the same time, adding layers of caching.
Although you can use it without a local source, the greatest benefit comes from combining Stock with a local database such as Floor, Drift, Sqflite, Realm, etc.
Features
- Combine local (DB, cache) and network data simply. It provides a data
Stream
where you can listen and work with your data. - Know the data
Stream
state. It's useful for displaying errors or loading indicators, for example. - If you are not using a local DB,
Stock
provides a memory cache, to share and improve upon your app's experience. - Work with your data more safely. If an error is thrown, Stock will catch it and return it into the stream so it can be handled easily.
Overview
A Stock
is responsible for managing a particular data request.
It is based on two important classes:
Fetcher
: defines how data will be fetched over the network.SourceOfTruth
: defines how local data will be read and written in your local cache. AlthoughStock
can be used without it, we recommend its usage.
Stock
uses generic keys as identifiers for data.
A key can be any value object that properly implements toString()
, equals()
and hashCode()
.
When you create Stock
, it provides you with a bunch of methods in order to access the data.
The most important one is stream()
, which provides you with a Stream
of your data, which can be used to update your UI or to do a specific action.
Getting started
To use this package, add stock
as a dependency in your pubspec.yaml file.
1. Create a Fetcher
The Fetcher
is required to fetch new data from the network.
You can create it from a Future
or from a Stream
.
FutureFetcher
is usually used alongside a RestApi, whereas StreamFetcher
is used with a Stream
source like a Web Socket.
final futureFetcher = Fetcher.ofFuture<String, List<Tweet>>(
(userId) => _api.getUserTweets(userId),
);
final streamFetcher = Fetcher.ofStream<String, List<Tweet>>(
(userId) => _api.getUserTweetsStream(userId),
);
2. Create a Source Of Truth
The SourceOfTruth
is used to read and write the remote data in a local cache.
Generally you will implement the SourceOfTruth
using a local database. However, if you are not using a local database / cache, the library provides the CachedSourceOfTruth
, a source of truth which stores the data in memory.
final sourceOfTruth = SourceOfTruth<String, List<Tweet>>(
reader: (userId) => _database.getUserTweets(userId),
writer: (userId, tweets) => _database.writeUserTweets(userId, tweets),
delete: (userId) => _database.deleteUserTweets(userId), // this is optional
deleteAll: () => _database.deleteAllTweets(), // this is optional
);
In this example, Fetcher
type is exactly the SourceOfTruth
type. If you need to use multiple types, you can use the mapTo
extension.
Note: to the proper operation, when write
is invoked with new data, the source of truth has to emit the new value in the reader
.
3. Create the Stock
Stock
lets you combine the different data sources and get the data.
final stock = Stock<String, List<Tweet>>(
fetcher: fetcher,
sourceOfTruth: sourceOfTruth,
);
Get a data Stream
from Stock
You can generate a data Stream
using stream()
.
You need to invoke it with a specific key
, and an optional refresh
value that tells Stock if a refresh is optional or mandatory.
That returns a data stream of StockResponse
, which has 3 possible values:
StockResponseLoading
informs that a network request is in progress. It can be useful to display a loading indicator in your UI.StockResponseData
holds the response data. It has avalue
field which includes an instance of the type returned byStock
.StockResponseError
indicates that an error happened. When an error happens,Stock
does not throw an exception, instead, it wraps it in this class. It includes anerror
field that contains the exception thrown by the givenorigin
.
Each StockResponse
includes an origin
field which specifies where the event is coming from.
stock
.stream('user_id', refresh: true)
.listen((StockResponse<List<Tweet>> stockResponse) {
stockResponse.when(
onLoading: (origin) => _displayLoadingIndicator(),
onData: (origin, data) => _displayTweetsInUI(data),
onError: (origin, error, stacktrace) => _displayErrorInUi(error),
);
});
Note: Stock
provides a large list of extensions to facilitate and manipulate the responses.
Get non-stream data from Stock
Stock provides a couple of methods to get data without using a data stream.
get
returns cached data -if it is cached- otherwise will return fresh/network data (updating your caches).fresh
returns fresh data updating your cacheclear
purge a particular entry from memory and disk cacheclearAll
Purge all entries from memory and disk cache
// Get fresh data
final List<Tweet> freshTweets = await stock.fresh(key);
// Get the previous cached data
final List<Tweet> cachedTweets = await stock.get(key);
// Clear key from stock
await stock.clear(key);
// Clear all keys from stock
await stock.clearAll();
Use different types for Fetcher
and SourceOfTruth
Sometimes you need to use different entities for Network and DB. For that case Stock
provides the StockTypeMapper
, a class that transforms one entity into the other.
StockTypeMapper
is used in the SourceOfTruth
via the method mapToUsingMapper
class TweetMapper implements StockTypeMapper<DbTweet, NetworkTweet> {
@override
NetworkTweet fromInput(DbTweet value) => NetworkTweet(value);
@override
DbTweet fromOutput(NetworkTweet value) => DbTweet(value);
}
final SourceOfTruth<int, DbTweet> sot = _createMapper();
final SourceOfTruth<int, NetworkTweet> newSot = sot.mapToUsingMapper(TweetMapper());
You can also achieve the same result using the mapTo
extension.
final SourceOfTruth<int, DbTweet> sot = _createMapper();
final SourceOfTruth<int, NetworkTweet> newSot = mapTo(
(networkTweet) => DbTweet(networkTweet),
(dbTweet) => NetworkTweet(dbTweet),
);
Use a non-stream source of truth
Sometimes your Source of Truth does not provide you with a real-time data stream.
For example, suppose that you are using shared_preferences to store your data, or you are just catching your data in memory.
For these cases, Stock
provides you the CachedSourceOfTruth
, a SourceOfTruth
that be helpful in these cases.
class SharedPreferencesSourceOfTruth extends CachedSourceOfTruth<String, String> {
SharedPreferencesSourceOfTruth();
@override
@protected
Stream<T?> reader(String key) async* {
final prefs = await SharedPreferences.getInstance();
// Read data from an non-stream source
final stringValue = prefs.getString(key);
setCachedValue(key, stringValue);
yield* super.reader(key);
}
@override
@protected
Future<void> write(String key, String? value) async {
final prefs = await SharedPreferences.getInstance();
await prefs.setString(key, value);
await super.write(key, value);
}
}
This class can be used with StockTypeMapper
to transform your data into an entity.
// The mapper json to transform a string into a User
final StockTypeMapper<String, User> mapper = _createUserMapper();
final SharedPreferencesSourceOfTruth<String, User> = SharedPreferencesSourceOfTruth()
.mapToUsingMapper(mapper);
Additional information
For bugs please use GitHub Issues. For questions, ideas, and discussions use GitHub Discussions.
Made with ❤️ by Xmartlabs.
License
Copyright (c) 2022 Xmartlabs SRL.
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.
Libraries
- stock
- A Dart package for Async Data Loading and Caching,