Paging 3 is significantly different from earlier versions of the Paging library. This version provides enhanced functionality and addresses common difficulties with using Paging 2. If your app already uses an earlier version of the Paging library, read this page to learn more about migrating to Paging 3.
If Paging 3 is the first version of the Paging library that you are using in your app, see Load and display paged data for basic usage information.
Benefits of migrating to Paging 3
Paging 3 includes the following features that were not present in earlier versions of the library:
- First-class support for Kotlin coroutines and Flow.
- Support for async loading using RxJava
Single
or GuavaListenableFuture
primitives. - Built-in load state and error signals for responsive UI design, including retry and refresh functionality.
- Improvements to the repository layer, including cancellation support and a simplified data source interface.
- Improvements to the presentation layer, list separators, custom page transforms, and loading state headers and footers.
Migrate your app to Paging 3
To fully migrate to Paging 3, you must migrate all three of the major components from Paging 2:
DataSource
classesPagedList
PagedListAdapter
However, some Paging 3 components are backwards-compatible with previous
versions of Paging. In particular, the
PagingSource
API from Paging
3 can be a data source for
LivePagedListBuilder
and RxPagedListBuilder
from older versions. Similarly, the Pager
API can use older
DataSource
objects with the
asPagingSourceFactory()
method. This means that you have the following
migration options:
- You can migrate your
DataSource
toPagingSource
but leave the rest of your Paging implementation unchanged. - You can migrate your
PagedList
andPagedListAdapter
but still use the olderDataSource
API. - You can migrate the entire Paging implementation to fully migrate your app to Paging 3.
The sections on this page explain how to migrate Paging components on each layer of your app.
DataSource classes
This section describes all of the necessary changes to migrate an older Paging
implementation to use PagingSource
.
The PageKeyedDataSource
, PositionalDataSource
, and ItemKeyedDataSource
from Paging 2 are all combined into the PagingSource
API in Paging 3. The
loading methods from all of the old API classes are combined into a single
load()
method in PagingSource
. This reduces code duplication because much of
the logic across the loading methods in implementations of the old API classes
is often identical.
All loading method parameters are replaced in Paging 3 with a LoadParams
sealed class, which includes subclasses for each load type. If you need to
differentiate among load types in your load()
method, check which
subclass of LoadParams
was passed in: LoadParams.Refresh
,
LoadParams.Prepend
, or LoadParams.Append
.
To learn more about implementing PagingSource
, see Define a data
source.
Refresh keys
Implementations of PagingSource
must define how refreshes resume from the
middle of the loaded paged data. Do this by implementing
getRefreshKey()
to map the correct initial key using state.anchorPosition
as the most recently
accessed index.
Kotlin
// Replaces ItemKeyedDataSource. override fun getRefreshKey(state: PagingState<String, User>): String? { return state.anchorPosition?.let { anchorPosition -> state.getClosestItemToPosition(anchorPosition)?.id } } // Replacing PositionalDataSource. override fun getRefreshKey(state: PagingState<Int, User>): Int? { return state.anchorPosition }
Java
// Replaces ItemKeyedDataSource. @Nullable @Override String getRefreshKey(state: PagingState<String, User>) { Integer anchorPosition = state.anchorPosition; if (anchorPosition == null) { return null; } return state.getClosestItemToPosition(anchorPosition); } // Replaces PositionalDataSource. @Nullable @Override Integer getRefreshKey(state: PagingState<Integer, User>) { return state.anchorPosition; }
Java
// Replacing ItemKeyedDataSource. @Nullable @Override String getRefreshKey(state: PagingState<String, User>) { Integer anchorPosition = state.anchorPosition; if (anchorPosition == null) { return null; } return state.getClosestItemToPosition(anchorPosition); } // Replacing PositionalDataSource. @Nullable @Override Integer getRefreshKey(state: PagingState<Integer, User>) { return state.anchorPosition; }
List transformations
In older versions of the Paging library, transformation of the paged data relies on the following methods:
DataSource.map()
DataSource.mapByPage()
DataSource.Factory.map()
DataSource.Factory.mapByPage()
In Paging 3, all transformations are applied as operators on PagingData
. If
you use any of the methods in the preceding list to transform your paged list,
you must move your transformation logic from the DataSource
to the
PagingData
when constructing the Pager
using your new PagingSource
.
To learn more about applying transformations to paged data using Paging 3, see Transform data streams.
PagedList
This section describes all of the necessary changes to migrate an older Paging
implementation to use Pager
and PagingData
in Paging 3.
PagedListBuilder classes
PagingData
replaces the existing PagedList
from Paging 2. To migrate to
PagingData
, you must update the following:
- Paging configuration has moved from
PagedList.Config
toPagingConfig
. LivePagedListBuilder
andRxPagedListBuilder
have been combined into a singlePager
class.Pager
exposes an observableFlow<PagingData>
with its.flow
property. RxJava and LiveData variants are also available as extension properties, which are callable from Java via static methods and are provided from thepaging-rxjava*
andpaging-runtime
modules respectively.
Kotlin
val flow = Pager( // Configure how data is loaded by passing additional properties to // PagingConfig, such as prefetchDistance. PagingConfig(pageSize = 20) ) { ExamplePagingSource(backend, query) }.flow .cachedIn(viewModelScope)
Java
// CoroutineScope helper provided by the lifecycle-viewmodel-ktx artifact. CoroutineScope viewModelScope = ViewModelKt.getViewModelScope(viewModel); Pager<Integer, User> pager = Pager<>( new PagingConfig(/* pageSize = */ 20), () -> ExamplePagingSource(backend, query)); Flowable<PagingData<User>> flowable = PagingRx.getFlowable(pager); PagingRx.cachedIn(flowable, viewModelScope);
Java
// CoroutineScope helper provided by the lifecycle-viewmodel-ktx artifact. CoroutineScope viewModelScope = ViewModelKt.getViewModelScope(viewModel); Pager<Integer, User> pager = Pager<>( new PagingConfig(/* pageSize = */ 20), () -> ExamplePagingSource(backend, query)); PagingLiveData.cachedIn(PagingLiveData.getLiveData(pager), viewModelScope);
To learn more about setting up a reactive stream of PagingData
objects using
Paging 3, see Set up a stream of
PagingData.
BoundaryCallback for layered sources
In Paging 3,
RemoteMediator
replaces
PagedList.BoundaryCallback
as a handler for paging from network and database.
To learn more about using RemoteMediator
to page from network and database in
Paging 3, see the Android Paging
codelab.
PagedListAdapter
This section describes all of the necessary changes to migrate an older Paging
implementation to use the PagingDataAdapter
or AsyncPagingDataDiffer
classes
from Paging 3.
Paging 3 provides PagingDataAdapter
to handle the new PagingData
reactive
streams. Otherwise, PagedListAdapter
and PagingDataAdapter
have the same
interface. To migrate from PagedListAdapter
to PagingDataAdapter
, change
your implementation of PagedListAdapter
to extend PagingDataAdapter
instead.
To learn more about PagingDataAdapter
, see Define a RecyclerView
adapter.
AsyncPagedListDiffer
If you currently use a custom RecyclerView.Adapter
implementation with
AsyncPagedListDiffer
, migrate your implementation to use the
AsyncPagingDataDiffer
provided in Paging 3 instead:
Kotlin
AsyncPagingDataDiffer(diffCallback, listUpdateCallback)
Java
new AsyncPagingDataDiffer(diffCallback, listUpdateCallback);
Java
new AsyncPagingDataDiffer(diffCallback, listUpdateCallback);
Additional resources
To learn more about the Paging library, see the following additional resources:
Codelabs
Samples
- Android Architecture Components Paging sample
- Android Architecture Components Paging with Database and Network sample
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