24

So I was migrating an Android Studio project to Java 8, Android API level 24 and the Jack toolchain today to check out the new features, especially lambdas and CompletableFuture.

Unfortunately, CompletableFuture seems to be available only from API level 24 on (my minimum API level for that project being 16).

Do you know of any plans on bringing CompletableFuture to the Android support library? It looks like a nice solution for the Promises pattern.

3
  • 5
    I don't know about Google's plans for the support library. But note that the streamsupport project also provides a backport of CompletableFuture in its streamsupport-cfuture module. This runs (and get's regularly tested) on Android and all Java versions >= 6. See sourceforge.net/projects/streamsupport Jul 6, 2016 at 17:21
  • @StefanZobel If you make your comment an answer to my question I will accept it as best answer (since it covers Android) Jul 14, 2016 at 11:10
  • Thanks. Have done that. See below. Jul 14, 2016 at 13:48

4 Answers 4

32

The streamsupport project provides a backport of CompletableFuture in its streamsupport-cfuture component which can be used for Android development, supported on all devices.

Either use

dependencies {
    implementation 'net.sourceforge.streamsupport:streamsupport-cfuture:1.7.4'
}

or the more modern android-retrofuture fork for Android Studio >= 3.x

dependencies {
    implementation 'net.sourceforge.streamsupport:android-retrofuture:1.7.4'
}

if you can use Android Studio 3.x and above.

The new Java 12 exception handling methods for CompletableFuture JDK-8211010 have been integrated in release 1.7.0

For users who want a minimal dependency footprint there is also a 105 KiB minifuture variant which is a "stripped to the bones" version of streamsupport-cfuture.

dependencies {
    implementation 'net.sourceforge.streamsupport:streamsupport-minifuture:1.7.4'
}

This has no dependencies and provides only the minimum API necessary to use CompletableFuture and nothing else (no Streams, no public ForkJoinPool and such).

6

streamsupport library mentioned in Stefan Zobel's answer was forked especially for Android Studio >=3.0 desugar toolchain, please check android-retrofuture

5

If you don't need all features of the CompletableFuture (e.g. result chaining), you can use this class (Kotlin):

/**
 * A backport of Java `CompletableFuture` which works with old Androids.
 */
class CompletableFutureCompat<V> : Future<V> {
    private sealed class Result<out V> {
        abstract val value: V
        class Ok<V>(override val value: V) : Result<V>()
        class Error(val e: Throwable) : Result<Nothing>() {
            override val value: Nothing
                get() = throw e
        }
        object Cancel : Result<Nothing>() {
            override val value: Nothing
                get() = throw CancellationException()
        }
    }

    /**
     * Offers the completion result for [result].
     *
     * If this queue is not empty, the future is completed.
     */
    private val completion = LinkedBlockingQueue<Result<V>>(1)
    /**
     * Holds the result of the computation. Takes the item from [completion] upon running and provides it as a result.
     */
    private val result = FutureTask<V> { completion.peek()!!.value }
    /**
     * If not already completed, causes invocations of [get]
     * and related methods to throw the given exception.
     *
     * @param ex the exception
     * @return `true` if this invocation caused this CompletableFuture
     * to transition to a completed state, else `false`
     */
    fun completeExceptionally(ex: Throwable): Boolean {
        val offered = completion.offer(Result.Error(ex))
        if (offered) {
            result.run()
        }
        return offered
    }

    /**
     * If not already completed, completes this CompletableFuture with
     * a [CancellationException].
     *
     * @param mayInterruptIfRunning this value has no effect in this
     * implementation because interrupts are not used to control
     * processing.
     *
     * @return `true` if this task is now cancelled
     */
    override fun cancel(mayInterruptIfRunning: Boolean): Boolean {
        val offered = completion.offer(Result.Cancel)
        if (offered) {
            result.cancel(mayInterruptIfRunning)
        }
        return offered
    }

    /**
     * If not already completed, sets the value returned by [get] and related methods to the given value.
     *
     * @param value the result value
     * @return `true` if this invocation caused this CompletableFuture
     * to transition to a completed state, else `false`
     */
    fun complete(value: V): Boolean {
        val offered = completion.offer(Result.Ok(value))
        if (offered) {
            result.run()
        }
        return offered
    }

    override fun isDone(): Boolean = completion.isNotEmpty()

    override fun get(): V = result.get()

    override fun get(timeout: Long, unit: TimeUnit): V = result.get(timeout, unit)

    override fun isCancelled(): Boolean = completion.peek() == Result.Cancel
}
4

Related and perhaps useful for you: Java: Optimizing an application using asynchronous programming

This answer is about CompletableFuture on Java 7 using the library mentioned in the comment above, not on Android. However, the lib's documentation states that it works on Android. I haven't used it myself though.

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  • 3
    This should be a comment. Mar 22, 2017 at 17:42
  • 3
    Does not work on Android. Requires API 24 still, which is the original issue.
    – Bisclavret
    Mar 7, 2018 at 1:34
  • 4
    @Bisclavret I was talking about streamsupport which is mentioned in that answer (specifically the streamsupport-cfuture component). That one only requires API level 14 or 15 and it works very well.
    – Sartorius
    Mar 8, 2018 at 14:16

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