with one click
kotlin-coroutines-expert
Expert patterns for Kotlin Coroutines and Flow, covering structured concurrency, error handling, and testing.
Menu
Expert patterns for Kotlin Coroutines and Flow, covering structured concurrency, error handling, and testing.
Use when CrossFrame Suite routes explicit Chinese casebook work: turning materials into reusable cases, anonymized entries, mechanisms, and retrieval indexes.
Use only when the user explicitly names crossframe-critical for a Chinese structural critique dossier, article plan, or long-form critical essay.
Use when CrossFrame Suite routes explicit Chinese proposition testing, debate analysis, hidden-premise review, rebuttal design, or withdrawal condition checks.
Use when CrossFrame Suite routes explicit Chinese reader replies, editor responses, consultation-style short answers, or boundary-aware structural advice.
Use when explicit CrossFrame work needs a Chinese critical insight essay, commentary, concept essay, public piece, or structure-to-article draft after diagnosis.
Use when CrossFrame Suite routes explicit Chinese notes for books, theories, articles, excerpts, bidirectional reading, absorption, or conflict mapping.
| name | kotlin-coroutines-expert |
| description | Expert patterns for Kotlin Coroutines and Flow, covering structured concurrency, error handling, and testing. |
| risk | safe |
| source | community |
| date_added | 2026-02-27 |
A guide to mastering asynchronous programming with Kotlin Coroutines. Covers advanced topics like structured concurrency, Flow transformations, exception handling, and testing strategies.
Flow.Always launch coroutines within a defined CoroutineScope. Use coroutineScope or supervisorScope to group concurrent tasks.
suspend fun loadDashboardData(): DashboardData = coroutineScope {
val userDeferred = async { userRepo.getUser() }
val settingsDeferred = async { settingsRepo.getSettings() }
DashboardData(
user = userDeferred.await(),
settings = settingsDeferred.await()
)
}
Use CoroutineExceptionHandler for top-level scopes, but rely on try-catch within suspending functions for granular control.
val handler = CoroutineExceptionHandler { _, exception ->
println("Caught $exception")
}
viewModelScope.launch(handler) {
try {
riskyOperation()
} catch (e: IOException) {
// Handle network error specifically
}
}
Use StateFlow for state that needs to be retained, and SharedFlow for events.
// Cold Flow (Lazy)
val searchResults: Flow<List<Item>> = searchQuery
.debounce(300)
.flatMapLatest { query -> searchRepo.search(query) }
.flowOn(Dispatchers.IO)
// Hot Flow (State)
val uiState: StateFlow<UiState> = _uiState.asStateFlow()
suspend fun fetchDataWithErrorHandling() = supervisorScope {
val task1 = async {
try { api.fetchA() } catch (e: Exception) { null }
}
val task2 = async { api.fetchB() }
// If task2 fails, task1 is NOT cancelled because of supervisorScope
val result1 = task1.await()
val result2 = task2.await() // May throw
}
Dispatchers.IO for blocking I/O operations.ViewModel.onCleared).TestScope and runTest for unit testing coroutines.GlobalScope. It breaks structured concurrency and can lead to leaks.CancellationException unless you rethrow it.Problem: Coroutine test hangs or fails unpredictably.
Solution: Ensure you are using runTest and injecting TestDispatcher into your classes so you can control virtual time.