Playlists
Playlist
s are reactive lists of videos that can be played and observed efficiently, with built-in
support for pagination, caching and preloading. This is the recommended way of fetching and
playing videos through our player.
As with querying videos, the start point is the video store (VideoKit.videos()
).
Also, to fetch playlist you will need a valid session or the call will return an error.
Inspecting playlists
Every playlist holds a list of videos in memory. At first, this list represent the first "page" of
results that were retrieved from server. These videos can be retrieved with Playlist.getVideo
:
val playlist: Playlist = ...
val size: Int = playlist.size
val video: Video = playlist.getVideo(0)
If getVideo
is called with an index bigger than playlist.size
, it will throw an exception.
If you need more videos than those available at the moment, you can request a new batch of results
by using Playlist.loadMore()
:
// Load next page
val nextPage: Call<Unit> = playlist.loadMore()
nextPage.onSuccess {
// Got new videos!
}
Note that if Playlist.loadMoreOnAccess
is true (default), the playlist will automatically load new
pages as you consume the playlist with getVideo
, checking if you are getting close enough to the last
available video. This makes it easy to show a list of videos without worrying about dynamic contents.
Observing playlists
Playlists can be observed by registering a PlaylistListener
. This is extremely useful when
videos are shown in a RecyclerView
, for example, so that you can call the appropriate notify*
methods whenever something changes.
val playlist: Playlist = ...
playlist.addListener(object: PlaylistListener {
override fun onVideoInserted(id: String, index: Int) { ... }
override fun onVideoRemoved(id: String, index: Int) { ... }
override fun onVideoChanged(id: String, index: Int) { ... }
override fun onVideoMoved(id: String, fromIndex: Int, toIndex: Int) { ... }
})
Obtain playlists
As with other APIs, we use request objects to define the query parameters. All request objects
extend the PlaylistRequest
interface. We expose several types of requests, each one with different
configuration options.
Once you have the request, just call getPlaylist
:
val videos: VideoStore = VideoKit.videos()
videos.getPlaylist(request).onSuccess {
// Got playlist!
}.onError {
// Something went wrong.
}
By user
You can filter by user using UserPlaylistRequest
:
val request = UserPlaylistRequest(userIdentity)
val request = UserPlaylistRequest.builder(userIdentity) {
order(SortOrder.DESC)
pageSize(50)
}
By metadata and tags
You can filter by metadata and tags using FilteredPlaylistRequest
:
val request = FilteredPlaylistRequest(tags = tags, metadata = metadata)
val request = FilteredPlaylistRequest.builder() {
tags("tag1", "tag2")
metadata("key", "value")
order(SortOrder.DESC)
pageSize(50)
}
Custom playlists
You can create a playlist with custom videos using CustomPlaylistRequest
:
val request = CustomPlaylistRequest(ids = listOf("videoId1", "videoId2"))
val request = CustomPlaylistRequest.builder() {
ids("videoId1", "videoId2", "videoId3")
}
This is a special type of playlist which can be controlled by the user.
- It is mutable! You can use
add
orremove
functions to add ids, and videos will be loaded accordingly - It can't support the concept of page, so
loadMore
does nothing.
Preloading
As you access videos (through getVideo
) and consume them (through the player SDK), the playlist
will automatically cache video data and preload videos that we think you might request soon. You
can customize the preload quality using preloadQuality
:
playlist.preloadQuality = Quality.AUTO // recommended
playlist.preloadQuality = Quality.HIGH
playlist.preloadQuality = Quality.MEDIUM
playlist.preloadQuality = Quality.LOW