The Gravatar Android SDK is a library that provides a set of UI components and utilities to fetch and display Gravatar images and profile data in Android applications.
If you're also looking to integrate Gravatar in your iOS app, check out our Gravatar SDK for iOS!
Hi there! If you're here because you want to integrate the Gravatar SDK into your Android application, please take a look at our Get Started guide. You'll find a quick overview of how to get an API key and use the library in your projects.
This project contains the source code for the Gravatar SDK library and a demo app. The demo app aims to achieve two different goals. On the one hand, it demonstrates how to use the Gravatar SDK library. On the other hand it serves as a testbed for the library.
The SDK is still in its early stages, but we can identify the following modules:
The core functionality of the Gravatar SDK library. It provides a set of classes and methods to interact with the Gravatar API.
- Gravatar API clients: A set of classes and methods to interact with the Gravatar API. It's responsible for handling the network requests and parsing the responses.
- Gravatar Utils: A set of utility classes and methods to handle the Gravatar URLs, the Gravatar profile, etc.
A set of UI components to display the Gravatar images, profiles or information in general. Those components are implemented in Jetpack Compose and can contain logic to interact with the Gravatar API client.
- Gravatar UI components: A set of UI components to display the Gravatar images, profiles or information in general. Those components are implemented in Jetpack Compose and can contain logic to interact with the Gravatar API client.
The QuickEditor module contains tools and UI components to quickly edit the Gravatar profile.
We decided to go with a manual injection basically for two main reasons:
- We avoid adding a new project dependency and possible conflicts while integrating the SDK.
- The expected size and complexity of the SDK allow manual injection without too much trouble.
If you need to inject classes, you can use the GravatarSdkContainer class as the entry point. This class is responsible for all the DI in the SDK.
Run unit tests on your machine via the following command:
./gradlew test
We use Roborazzi to take screenshots of the UI components. The screenshots are stored in the screenshotsTests
directory. To regenerate the screenshots, run the following command:
./gradlew :gravatar-ui:recordRoborazziDebug -Pscreenshot
To compare the screenshots, run the following command:
./gradlew :gravatar-ui:verifyRoborazziDebug -Pscreenshot
We use Ktlint to enforce a consistent coding style. It is integrated into the project as a Gradle plugin using the jlleitschuh/ktlint-gradle wrapper.
Check the style of the whole project or just the desired module (library or demo app) with the following commands:
./gradlew ktlintCheck
./gradlew :gravatar:ktlintCheck
./gradlew :gravatar-ui:ktlintCheck
./gradlew :quickeditor:ktlintCheck
./gradlew :app:ktlintCheck
You can also try to let Ktlint fix the code style issues. Just use:
./gradlew ktlintFormat
./gradlew :gravatar:ktlintFormat
./gradlew :gravatar-ui:ktlintFormat
./gradlew :quickeditor:ktlintFormat
./gradlew :app:ktlintFormat
We use Detekt to perform static code analysis. You can run Detekt via a gradle command:
./gradlew detekt
./gradlew :gravatar:detekt
./gradlew :gravatar-ui:detekt
./gradlew :quickeditor:detekt
./gradlew :app:detekt
Explicit API mode is enabled in strict mode for the library. This means that the compiler performs additional checks that help make the library's API clearer and more consistent.
Those errors will force us to take care of the visibility modifiers in order to limit the public classes/methods of the API to the minimum required.
By default, Android Studio will show a warning, Redundant visibility modifier
.
You can remove the warning by changing the setting for this project
in: Settings
-> Editor
-> Inspections
-> Kotlin
-> Redundant Constructors
-> Redundant visibility modifier
.
We use OpenAPI Generator to generate the API code from the OpenAPI definitions.
The SDK project has integrated the OpenAPI Generator Gradle plugin to generate the API code from the OpenAPI definitions. The plugin is
configured in the build.gradle.kts
file.
The OpenAPI definitions are located in the openapi
directory. In the same directory, you can find the templates
directory, which contains
the custom templates used by the OpenAPI Generator to generate the code that the Gravatar library needs. You can obtain the default templates by running the following command:
openapi-generator author template -g kotlin --library jvm-retrofit2
The OpenAPI Generator documentation provides more information about the templates.
The generator's output folder is the build
directory. However, as we don't need all the generated files, the Gradle task has been modified to move only the desired code to the gravatar
module. In addition, the
last step of the task is to format the generated code with Ktlint.
Important: Do not manually modify the com.gravatar.api
folder. The OpenAPI Generator will overwrite it.
To regerate the code you can use the following gradlew task:
./gradlew :gravatar:openApiGenerate
The SDK is published to the Automattic's S3 instance via publish-to-s3
Gradle plugin.
The published version is calculated depending on the Git context, in this order:
- if there's a tag, version is
<tag name>
- if there's a PR, version is
<pr number>-<commit hash>
- else
<branch name>-<commit hash>
To use the repository, it's needed to add the custom repository:
repositories {
maven {
url "https://a8c-libs.s3.amazonaws.com/android"
}
}
dependencies {
implementation ("com.gravatar:gravatar:<version>")
// OR
implementation ("com.gravatar:gravatar-ui:<version>")
// OR
implementation ("com.gravatar:gravatar-quickeditor:<version>")
}
We're using kdoc to document the library's code. Dokka has been setup to generate html documentation from kdoc. To generate the HTML docs in docs/dokka/
, run the following command:
./gradlew dokkaHtmlMultiModule
Here is the most recent release of the Gravatar-SDK-Android API documentation generated by Dokka.
Gravatar Android SDK uses GlotPress to translate strings in the project.
This includes two modules with strings.xml
files: :gravatar-ui
and :gravatar-quickeditor
.
To fetch the latest translation run:
bundle exec fastlane download_translations skip_commit:true|false
If skip_commit
is set to false
it will automatically create a new commit with the new translations.
If you wish to check the changes first set it to true
and commit the changes yourself.
We're following Semantic Versioning for the releases. Here is the process to create a new release:
- Make sure the latest translations are commited the repository. See Translations
- Generate a new release branch:
git checkout -b release/x.x.x
. - Update version number
versionName
tox.x.x
in the rootbuild.gradle.kts
file. - Build the Dokka documentation:
./gradlew dokkaHtmlMultiModule
and commit the generated files to the git repository. - Open a PR, wait for a review, merge the PR on approval.
- Pull the
trunk
branch and tag the git commit with the version number:git tag -a x.x.x -m "Release x.x.x"
- Push the new tag:
git push --tags
. - Go to the GitHub releases page and create a new release with the tag name and the release notes.
Read our Contributing Guide to learn about reporting issues, contributing code, and more ways to contribute.
Gravatar-SDK-Android is an open source project covered by the Mozilla Public License Version 2.0.