Tutorial: Demo Project
Learn how to build a simple note-taking app with ObjectBox.
This tutorial will walk you through a simple note-taking app explaining how to do basic operations with ObjectBox. To just integrate ObjectBox into your project, look at the Getting Started page.
You can check out the example code from GitHub. This allows you to run the code and explore it in its entirety. It is a simple app for taking notes where you can add new notes by typing in some text and delete notes by clicking on an existing note.
git clone https://github.com/objectbox/objectbox-examples.git
cd objectbox-examples/android-app
The Note entity and Box class
To store notes there is an entity class called Note
(or Task
in Python). It defines the structure or model of the data persisted (saved) in the database for a note: its id, the note text and the creation date.
@Entity
public class Note {
@Id
long id;
String text;
String comment;
Date date;
...
}
In general, an ObjectBox entity is an annotated class persisted in the database with its properties. In order to extend the note or to create new entities, you simply modify or create new plain classes and annotate them with @Entity
and @Id;
in Python opt-in uid
argument i.e. @Entity(uid=)
.
Go ahead and build the project, for example by using Build > Make project in Android Studio. This triggers ObjectBox to generate some classes, like MyObjectBox.java
, and some other classes used by ObjectBox internally.
Inserting notes
To see how new notes are added to the database, take a look at the following code fragments. The Box
provides database operations for Note
objects. A Box is the main interaction with object data.
@Override
public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
...
notesBox = ObjectBox.get().boxFor(Note.class);
...
}
When a user adds a note the method addNote()
is called. There, a new Note
object is created and put into the database using the Box
reference:
private void addNote() {
...
Note note = new Note();
note.setText(noteText);
note.setComment(comment);
note.setDate(new Date());
notesBox.put(note);
Log.d(App.TAG, "Inserted new note, ID: " + note.getId());
...
}
Note that the ID property (0 when creating the Note
object), is assigned by ObjectBox during a put.
Removing/deleting notes
When the user taps a note, it is deleted. The Box
provides remove()
to achieve this:
OnItemClickListener noteClickListener = new OnItemClickListener() {
@Override
public void onItemClick(AdapterView<?> parent, View view, int position, long id) {
Note note = notesAdapter.getItem(position);
notesBox.remove(note);
Log.d(App.TAG, "Deleted note, ID: " + note.getId());
...
}
};
Querying notes
To query and display notes in a list a Query
instance is built once:
@Override
public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
...
// Query all notes, sorted a-z by their text.
notesQuery = notesBox.query().order(Note_.text).build();
...
}
And then executed each time any notes change:
private void updateNotes() {
List<Note> notes = notesQuery.find();
notesAdapter.setNotes(notes);
}
In addition to a result sort order, you can add various conditions to filter the results, like equality or less/greater than, when building a query.
ObjectBox QueriesUpdating notes and more
What is not shown in the example, is how to update an existing (== the ID is not 0) note. Do so by just modifying any of its properties and then put it again with the changed object:
note.setText("This note has changed.");
notesBox.put(note);
There are additional methods to put, find, query, count or remove entities. Check out the methods of the Box class in API docs (for Java/Kotlin or Dart) to learn more.
Getting startedSetting up the database
Now that you saw ObjectBox in action, how did we get that database (or store) instance? Typically you should set up a BoxStore or Store once for the whole app. This example uses a helper class as recommended in the Getting Started guide.
Getting startedRemember: ObjectBox is a NoSQL database on its own and thus NOT based on SQL or SQLite. That’s why you do not need to set up “CREATE TABLE” statements during initialization.
More In-Depth Tutorials
🌿 Learn how to build a Food Sharing app with ObjectBox in Flutter/Dart
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