Store lambda in a variable in kotlin

12,079

Solution 1

Here's how you can do it:

class Foo {
    private var listener: () -> Unit = {}
    fun setListener(listener: () -> Unit) {
        this.listener = listener
    }
}

However, manually writing setters is discouraged in Kotlin. Instead, you can just make your property public:

class Foo {
    var listener: () -> Unit = {}
}

For reference, here are the docs about properties with lots of examples.

Solution 2

You can store a function in a property easily. The simplest way:

var listener: (() -> Unit)? = null

Usage:

foo.listener = { println("called") }

If you want your property to be set-only, you can create one public property with unusable getter and one private property for internal use. Full example:

class Example {

    // for internal use
    private var _listener: (() -> Unit)? = null

    // public set-only
    var listener: (() -> Unit)?
        @Deprecated(message = "set-only", level = DeprecationLevel.ERROR)
        get() = throw AssertionError() // unusable getter
        set(value) { _listener = value } // write-through setter

    fun somethingHappend() {
        _listener?.invoke()
    }
}
Share:
12,079
aloj
Author by

aloj

Updated on June 11, 2022

Comments

  • aloj
    aloj almost 2 years

    I'm starting developing in Android with kotlin and I have a problem with lambdas. I have a function to set a listener in my view, this looks like this:

    fun setListener(listener: () -> Unit) {
    }
    

    The problem is that the code passed as lambda won't be executed in setListener function, it will be executed in another part of my code (specifically when an item of a spinner is selected) so I have to "save" or "store" this lambda into a variable/property so that I'm able to execute it when needed. Any idea about how to do it?

    Edit: I've achieved it by doing:

    private var listener: (() -> Unit)? = null
    
    fun setListener(listener: () -> Unit) {
        this.listener = listener
    }
    

    Is there a better way to do it? Thanks