The Android framework provides a lot of flexibility in deciding how to organize and architect an Android app. While this freedom is very valuable, it can also lead to apps with large classes, inconsistent naming schemes, as well as mismatching or missing architectures. These types of issues can make testing, maintaining and extending your apps difficult.
The Android Architecture Blueprints project demonstrates strategies to help solve or avoid these common problems. This project implements the same app using different architectural concepts and tools.
You can use the samples in this project as a learning reference, or as a starting point for creating your own apps. The focus of this project is on demonstrating how to structure your code, design your architecture, and the eventual impact of adopting these patterns on testing and maintaining your app. You can use the techniques demonstrated here in many different ways to build apps. Your own particular priorities will impact how you implement the concepts in these projects, so you should not consider these samples to be canonical examples. To ensure the focus is kept on the aims described above, the app uses a simple UI.
This project hosts each sample app in separate repository branches. For more information, see the README.md
file in each branch.
Sample | Description |
---|---|
todo‑mvp | Demonstrates a basic Model‑View‑Presenter (MVP) architecture and provides a foundation on which the other samples are built. This sample also acts as a reference point for comparing and contrasting the other samples in this project. |
todo‑mvp‑clean | Uses concepts from Clean Architecture. |
todo‑mvp‑dagger | Uses Dagger 2 to add support for dependency injection. |
todo‑mvp‑rxjava | Uses RxJava 2 to implement concurrency, and abstract the data layer. |
todo‑mvvm‑databinding | Based on the todo-databinding sample, this version incorporates the Model‑View‑ViewModel pattern. |
todo‑mvvm‑live | Uses ViewModels and LiveData from Architecture Components and the Data Binding library with an MVVM architecture. |
Sample | Description |
---|---|
todo-mvp-kotlin | Conversion of todo-mvp to Kotlin. |
todo-mvvm-live-kotlin | Conversion of todo-mvvm-live to Kotlin. |
External samples are variants that may not be in sync with the rest of the branches in this repository.
Sample | Description |
---|---|
todo‑mvp‑fragmentless | Uses View objects instead of Fragment objects. |
todo‑mvp‑conductor | Uses the Conductor framework to refactor the app to use a single Activity architecture. |
todo‑mvi-rxjava | Adapts the Model-View-Intent pattern to Android to create a fully reactive architecture. |
todo‑mvp-kotlin-coroutines | Replaces the asynchronous operations with Kotlin's coroutines. |
These samples are no longer being maintained, but their implementation is still valid.
Sample | Description |
---|---|
todo‑mvp‑loaders | Fetches data using the Loaders API. |
todo‑databinding | Replaced by todo‑mvvm‑databinding |
todo‑mvp‑contentproviders | Based on the todo-mvp-loaders sample, this version fetches data using the Loaders API, and also makes use of content providers. |
Sample | Description |
---|---|
dev‑todo‑mvvm‑rxjava | Based on the todo-rxjava sample, this version incorporates the Model‑View‑ViewModel pattern. |
For information about planned samples, see "New sample" issues.
The app in this project aims to be simple enough that you can understand it quickly, but complex enough to showcase difficult design decisions and testing scenarios. For more information, see the app's specification.
The following screenshot illustrates the UI of the app:
Each sample includes a dedicated README.md
file where you can find related metrics, as well as subjective assessments and observations by contributors. The following factors are worth considering when selecting a particular sample for your app:
- The size of the app you are developing
- The size and experience of your team
- The amount of maintenance that you are expecting to have to do
- Whether you need a tablet layout
- Whether you need to support multiple platforms
- Your preference for the compactness of your codebase
For more information on choosing and comparing samples, see the following pages:
To open one of the samples in Android Studio, begin by checking out one of the sample branches, and then open the todoapp/
directory in Android Studio. The following series of steps illustrate how to open the todo‑mvp sample.
Note: The master branch does not compile.
Clone the repository:
git clone git@github.com:googlesamples/android-architecture.git
Checkout the todo-mvp sample:
git checkout todo-mvp
Note: To review a different sample, replace todo-mvp
with the name of sample you want to check out.
Finally open the todoapp/
directory in Android Studio.
This project is built by the community, and curated by Google as well as other core maintainers.
David González - Core developer (MVP Content Providers sample)
Karumi - Developers (MVP Clean Architecture sample)
Natalie Masse - Core developer
Erik Hellman - Developer (MVP RxJava sample)
Saúl Molinero - Developer (MVP Dagger sample)
Mike Nakhimovich - Developer (MVP Dagger sample)
Voicu Klein - Developer (MVP RxJava sample)
Jose Alcérreca - Lead/Core developer
Mustafa Kurtuldu - UX/design
Stephan Linzner - Core developer
Florina Muntenescu - Core developer
Sharif Salah - Technical Writer
Doug Sigelbaum - Kotlin conversion
Ben Weiss - Kotlin conversion
For more information on joining the project, see how to become a contributor and the contributor's guide