42

I wanted to know how can I send/emit items to a Kotlin.Flow, so my use case is:

In the consumer/ViewModel/Presenter I can subscribe with the collect function:

fun observe() {
 coroutineScope.launch {
    // 1. Send event
    reopsitory.observe().collect {
      println(it)
    }
  }
}

But the issue is in the Repository side, with RxJava we could use a Behaviorsubject expose it as an Observable/Flowable and emit new items like this:

behaviourSubject.onNext(true)

But whenever I build a new flow:

flow {

}

I can only collect. How can I send values to a flow?

3 Answers 3

52

If you want to get the latest value on subscription/collection you should use a ConflatedBroadcastChannel:

private val channel = ConflatedBroadcastChannel<Boolean>()

This will replicate BehaviourSubject, to expose the channel as a Flow:

// Repository
fun observe() {
  return channel.asFlow()
}

Now to send an event/value to that exposed Flow simple send to this channel.

// Repository
fun someLogicalOp() {
  channel.send(false) // This gets sent to the ViewModel/Presenter and printed.
}

Console:

false

If you wish to only receive values after you start collecting you should use a BroadcastChannel instead.

To make it clear:

Behaves as an Rx's PublishedSubject

private val channel = BroadcastChannel<Boolean>(1)

fun broadcastChannelTest() {
  // 1. Send event
  channel.send(true)

  // 2. Start collecting
  channel
    .asFlow()
    .collect {
      println(it)
    }

  // 3. Send another event
  channel.send(false)
}

false

Only false gets printed as the first event was sent before collect { }.


Behaves as an Rx's BehaviourSubject

private val confChannel = ConflatedBroadcastChannel<Boolean>()

fun conflatedBroadcastChannelTest() {
  // 1. Send event
  confChannel.send(true)

  // 2. Start collecting
  confChannel
    .asFlow()
    .collect {
      println(it)
    }

  // 3. Send another event
  confChannel.send(false)
}

true

false

Both events are printed, you always get the latest value (if present).

Also, want to mention Kotlin's team development on DataFlow (name pending):

Which seems better suited to this use case (as it will be a cold stream).

9
22

Take a look at MutableStateFlow documentation as it is a replacement for ConflatedBroadcastChannel that is going to be deprecated, very soon.

For a better context, look at the whole discussion on the original issue on Kotlin's repository on Github.

3
  • 3
    Still in @ExperimentalCoroutinesApi -- I'll update the accepted answer as soon as it is stable. Jun 22, 2020 at 17:28
  • 3
    @JoaquimLey, StateFlow has become stable in the coroutines 1.4.0 version. Nov 5, 2020 at 13:33
  • 1
    The bad thing about MutableStateFlow, it is works like distinctUntilchanges. You cant emit the same value. But sometimes you need.
    – Sever
    Dec 12, 2021 at 14:50
15

UPDATE:

Kotlin Coroutines 1.4.0 is now available with MutableSharedFlow, which replaces the need for Channel. MutableSharedFlow cleanup is also built in so you don't need to manually OPEN & CLOSE it, unlike Channel. Please use MutableSharedFlow if you need a Subject-like api for Flow

ORIGINAL ANSWER

Since your question had the android tag I'll add an Android implementation that allows you to easily create a BehaviorSubject or a PublishSubject that handles its own lifecycle.

This is relevant in Android because you don't want to forget to close the channel and leak memory. This implementation avoids the need to explicitly "dispose" of the reactive stream by tying it to the creation and destruction of the Fragment/Activity. Similar to LiveData

interface EventReceiver<Message> {
    val eventFlow: Flow<Message>
}

interface EventSender<Message> {
    fun postEvent(message: Message)
    val initialMessage: Message?
}

class LifecycleEventSender<Message>(
    lifecycle: Lifecycle,
    private val coroutineScope: CoroutineScope,
    private val channel: BroadcastChannel<Message>,
    override val initialMessage: Message?
) : EventSender<Message>, LifecycleObserver {

    init {
        lifecycle.addObserver(this)
    }

    override fun postEvent(message: Message) {
        if (!channel.isClosedForSend) {
            coroutineScope.launch { channel.send(message) }
        } else {
            Log.e("LifecycleEventSender","Channel is closed. Cannot send message: $message")
        }
    }

    @OnLifecycleEvent(Lifecycle.Event.ON_CREATE)
    fun create() {
        channel.openSubscription()
        initialMessage?.let { postEvent(it) }
    }

    @OnLifecycleEvent(Lifecycle.Event.ON_DESTROY)
    fun destroy() {
        channel.close()
    }
}

class ChannelEventReceiver<Message>(channel: BroadcastChannel<Message>) :
    EventReceiver<Message> {
    override val eventFlow: Flow<Message> = channel.asFlow()
}

abstract class EventRelay<Message>(
    lifecycle: Lifecycle,
    coroutineScope: CoroutineScope,
    channel: BroadcastChannel<Message>,
    initialMessage: Message? = null
) : EventReceiver<Message> by ChannelEventReceiver<Message>(channel),
    EventSender<Message> by LifecycleEventSender<Message>(
        lifecycle,
        coroutineScope,
        channel,
        initialMessage
    )

By using the Lifecycle library from Android, I can now create a BehaviorSubject that cleans itself up after the activity/fragment has been destroyed

class BehaviorSubject<String>(
    lifecycle: Lifecycle,
    coroutineScope: CoroutineScope,
    initialMessage = "Initial Message"
) : EventRelay<String>(
    lifecycle,
    coroutineScope,
    ConflatedBroadcastChannel(),
    initialMessage
)

or I can create a PublishSubject by using a buffered BroadcastChannel

class PublishSubject<String>(
    lifecycle: Lifecycle,
    coroutineScope: CoroutineScope,
    initialMessage = "Initial Message"
) : EventRelay<String>(
    lifecycle,
    coroutineScope,
    BroadcastChannel(Channel.BUFFERED),
    initialMessage
)

And now I can do something like this

class MyActivity: Activity() {

    val behaviorSubject = BehaviorSubject(
        [email protected],
        [email protected]
    )

    override fun onCreate(savedInstanceState: Bundle?) {
        super.onCreate(savedInstanceState)

        if (savedInstanceState == null) { 

            behaviorSubject.eventFlow
                .onEach { stringEvent ->
                    Log.d("BehaviorSubjectFlow", stringEvent)
                    // "BehaviorSubjectFlow: Initial Message"
                    // "BehaviorSubjectFlow: Next Message"
                }
                .flowOn(Dispatchers.Main)
                .launchIn([email protected])

        }
    }

    override fun onResume() {
        super.onResume()

        behaviorSubject.postEvent("Next Message")
    }
}
5
  • You are right it had the android tag, maybe my mistake but your answer does not reply to the question. I haven't tried but I think it is outside of the scope also, with that implementation how would one test the behaviorSubject or the presenter? May 15, 2020 at 11:44
  • "..your answer does not reply to the question." The question was, "I can only collect. How can I send values to a flow?" You can't "send" values to a Flow, in the same way you can't send values to an Observable. You need the equivalent of a Subject. But there is nothing like a Subject with the same semantics in the coroutines library at the time of this answer, but is coming soon.
    – flopshot
    May 15, 2020 at 12:09
  • "I haven't tried but I think it is outside of the scope" I would give ti a try. The implementation of a "BehaviorSubject" I proposed does exactly what you would expect from an Rx BehaviorSubject, but uses a BroadcastChannel as the backing reactive stream.
    – flopshot
    May 15, 2020 at 12:12
  • "with that implementation how would one test the behaviorSubject or the presenter?" I added the "Presenter" just to show that you can freely inject "behaviorSubject" into any view layer architecture, but now that I am seeing the answer again I agree that it is not necessary to the answer. Will remove. As for how I would test the "behaviorSubject" I can show the tests I use to test the expected behavior in a separate thread.
    – flopshot
    May 15, 2020 at 12:19
  • Probably best, I do appreciate your take but most likely not really directed to THIS specific question. May 27, 2020 at 14:54

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