Kinetic 0.4.0
See the version list below for details.
dotnet add package Kinetic --version 0.4.0
NuGet\Install-Package Kinetic -Version 0.4.0
<PackageReference Include="Kinetic" Version="0.4.0" />
paket add Kinetic --version 0.4.0
#r "nuget: Kinetic, 0.4.0"
// Install Kinetic as a Cake Addin #addin nuget:?package=Kinetic&version=0.4.0 // Install Kinetic as a Cake Tool #tool nuget:?package=Kinetic&version=0.4.0
What is Kinetic?
Kinetic is an alternative implementation of the Reactive framework focused on performance and lesser memory allocations.
Features
Objects
To achive the goal Kinetic doesn't support the INotifyPropertyChanged
interface and fully relies on IObservable<T>
. To make it work an observable property should via Property<T>
or ReadOnlyProperty<T>
structures which bundle a getter, a setter and an observable. Calling the Set
method on a property sets the corresponind field and notifyies observers about the change. The Changed
property returns an observable for the property which is a cached and reused, and no LINQ expressions allocated as it happens when WhenAnyValue
is used from Reactive.
private sealed class Some : Object
{
private int _number;
private string _text = string.Empty;
public Some() => Number.Changed.Subscribe(value => Set(Text, value.ToString()));
public Property<int> Number => Property(ref _number);
public ReadOnlyProperty<string> Text => Property(ref _text);
public static void Usage()
{
var some = new Some();
var numberExplicit = some.Number.Get();
int numberImplicit = some.Number;
some.Number.Set(42);
}
}
Collections
Instead of the standard ObservableCollection<T>
and other custom types implementing INotifyCollectionChanged
Kinetic has two built-in collections, ObservableList<T>
and ReadOnlyObservableList<T>
which use the same notification model as the rest of the framework. Both of them expose an IObservable<ListChange<T>>
through the Changed
property.
In contradiction to .NET and DynamicData, there are no multiple element changes to avoid memory allocations on notifications and code complexity for views. Therefore, each ListChange<T>
can represent one of the following actions:
RemoveAll
Remove
Insert
Replace
Move
Other than that Kinetic collections looks pretty similar to what the .NET ecosystem has.
For possible scenarios of making views using LINQ operators please refer to tests. Currently there are three operators with their async variants are available, but more options and operators should come to Kinetic:
OrderBy
OrderByAsync
Select
SelectAsync
Where
WhereAsync
Commands
Kinetic provides an implementation of the ICommand
interface which produces a result on completion by implementing IObservable<T>
too. Any command can have a state object passed to it on creation or received from the provided observable object.
Kinetic commands in contradistinction to Reactive support parameter validation on CanExecute
and Execute
, and even does nullable reference type validation.
// Nullable reference parameter
var command = Command<string?>.Create(p => p);
command.CanExecute(null); // returns true
command.CanExecute("text"); // returns true
// Non-nullable reference parameter
var command = Command<string>.Create(p => p);
command.CanExecute(null); // returns false
command.CanExecute("text"); // returns true
LINQ
The project provides a subset of LINQ extensions, which are contained by Kinetic.Linq
package. The key idea of it is to build a single state machine for a chain of extension method call to minimize memory occupied by the resulting observer, and to avoid many interface calls which happen in Reactive.
Integration with UI
Since all observable properties should be defined as Property<T>
or ReadOnlyProperty<T>
, there's a limitation of Kinetic usage. It's supported only by Avalonia at the moment thanfully to the extensible binding system, but a general solution to support any XAML framework will come later.
To make Avalonia recognize Kinetic properties, the Kinetic.Avalonia
package should be added and one line of code at startup as well:
Collection bindings automaticlly produce a proxy which translates ListChange<T>
to INotifyCollectionChanged
events.
using Avalonia.Data.Core;
using Kinetic.Data;
// Adds the accessor for Kinetic properties before the CLR property accessor
BindingPlugins.PropertyAccessors.Insert(2, new KineticPropertyAccessor());
This approach is incompatible with compiled bindings since XAMLIL has no idea about Kinetic properties and treats them as usual properties. Ability to create compiled bindings in XAML will come in one of next releases, but it's already available in code behind using
OneWay
andTwoWay
methods ofBinding
type inKinetic.Data
.
Product | Versions Compatible and additional computed target framework versions. |
---|---|
.NET | net8.0 is compatible. net8.0-android was computed. net8.0-browser was computed. net8.0-ios was computed. net8.0-maccatalyst was computed. net8.0-macos was computed. net8.0-tvos was computed. net8.0-windows was computed. |
-
net8.0
- No dependencies.
NuGet packages (2)
Showing the top 2 NuGet packages that depend on Kinetic:
Package | Downloads |
---|---|
Kinetic.Avalonia
A lightweight implementation of the Reactive framework. |
|
Kinetic.Linq
A lightweight implementation of the Reactive framework. |
GitHub repositories
This package is not used by any popular GitHub repositories.