Jake Wharton's talk at Devoxx 2013, Architecting Android Applications with Dagger, talked about creating a Dagger scope for logged in users only. This sort of thing sounds really clean, and I want to do this in my applications.
The code that was discussed in the talk was something along the lines of:
public class LoggedInActivity extends Activity {
@Inject User user;
@Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
setContentView(R.layout.activity_logged_in);
DaggerScopesApp app = (DaggerScopesApp) getApplication();
app.getObjectGraph().plus(new UserModule("exampleusername")).inject(this);
findViewById(R.id.do_something_button).setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
@Override
public void onClick(View v) {
Toast.makeText(LoggedInActivity.this, user.username + " : " +
user.someValue++, Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show();
}
});
}
}
However, if the injected User is scoped as a @Singleton, then its properties will disappear on config change (as the object graph is created in onCreate).
The solution is pretty simple, you can just do this "plus" operation once and store the new object graph somewhere else (maybe the application class), but I was wondering if this is a good approach? Can anyone from Square provide any insight into what you do in your applications? Do you just not have singleton objects in the "logged-in" graph?