Posts

Mastering Jetpack Compose Side Effects: Fixing the Stale Lambda Problem

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 Why your side effects might be using outdated data and how to bridge the gap between recomposition and coroutine lifecycles. In  Jetpack Compose , handling asynchronous tasks with  LaunchedEffect  is a daily requirement. However, there is a subtle pitfall that causes even senior engineers to stumble: the  Stale Lambda . When a long-running effect captures data from the composition scope, it can become “out of sync” with your current UI state. This article explains the mechanics of the stale lambda problem and how to use  rememberUpdatedState  to bridge the gap between recomposition and effect lifecycles. 🧠 The Mental Model: Why Effects Go Stale To understand the bug, we must look at the timeline of a Composable’s life.  Effects don’t automatically stay in sync with recomposition — you must explicitly bridge that gap. The Problem Timeline (Stale Capture) Composition #1:   LaunchedEffect(Unit)  starts. It captures a reference to  La...

Why Jetpack Compose is Faster: Mastering the Single-Pass Measurement System

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 Unpacking the "Double Taxation" of legacy Android Views and how Compose’s linear layout costs eliminate UI jank. If you’ve ever debugged a sluggish Android list, you’ve likely hunted for “Jank.” Often, the culprit isn’t your business logic, but a layout bottleneck known as  “Double Taxation.” In this post, we’ll explore how traditional Android Views handle measurement, why it occasionally leads to significant performance costs, and how Jetpack Compose’s  Constraint-Based Model  keeps your UI smooth. TL;DR: The Architecture Shift Legacy Views:  Certain layouts (like  weights  in  LinearLayout ) require multiple measurement passes per child. This can grow significantly with deep nesting. Jetpack Compose:  Designed so that children are typically measured  exactly once  during the main layout pass, keeping layout costs closer to linear even in deep hierarchies. Rule of Thumb:  A Compose refactor can often yield noticeable layout p...

Jetpack Compose Performance in RecyclerView: The Hidden Cost

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 Why your "start small" migration strategy might be causing scroll jank—and how to fix it using the TikTok "Island" model. TL;DR: The Performance Checklist Avoid  nesting multiple  ComposeView  instances inside a single  RecyclerView  item. Standard:  Use “One ViewHolder = One ComposeView” to minimize lifecycle overhead. Optimization:  Set content once in  init  and update via  State  to avoid resetting the composition root. The Endgame:  Transition to  LazyColumn  to eliminate the View-to-Compose "interop tax" entirely. The standard advice for migrating to Jetpack Compose is “start small.” Wrap a button in a  ComposeView , drop it into your XML, and move on. But as teams like TikTok and other global Android engineering orgs have discovered, “starting small” at the atomic level can lead to a  performance debt  that’s hard to pay off. If you are sprinkling dozens of micro- ComposeView  instance...