Fixed & documented, not-just-marketed: - HomeScreen now derives summary card from LocalDataManager.myResidences with VM fallback — populated PNG genuinely differs from empty. - DocumentsScreen added same LocalDataManager fallback pattern + ambient subscription check (bypass SubscriptionHelper's singleton gate). - ScreenshotTests.setUp seeds the global DataManager singleton from the fixture per variant (subscription/user/residences/tasks/docs/contractors/ lookups). Unblocks screens that bypass LocalDataManager. Honest coverage after all fixes: 10/34 surface-pairs genuinely differ (home, profile, residences, contractors, all_tasks, task_templates_browser in dark mode, etc.). The other 24 remain identical because their VMs independently track state via APILayer.getXxx() calls that fail in Robolectric — VM state stays Idle/Error, so gated "populated" branches never render. Root architectural fix needed (not landed here): every VM's xxxState should mirror DataManager.xxx reactively instead of tracking API results independently. That's a ~20-VM refactor tracked as follow-up in docs/parity-gallery.md "Known limitations". Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
This is a Kotlin Multiplatform project targeting Android, iOS, Web, Desktop (JVM).
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/composeApp is for code that will be shared across your Compose Multiplatform applications. It contains several subfolders:
- commonMain is for code that’s common for all targets.
- Other folders are for Kotlin code that will be compiled for only the platform indicated in the folder name. For example, if you want to use Apple’s CoreCrypto for the iOS part of your Kotlin app, the iosMain folder would be the right place for such calls. Similarly, if you want to edit the Desktop (JVM) specific part, the jvmMain folder is the appropriate location.
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/iosApp contains iOS applications. Even if you’re sharing your UI with Compose Multiplatform, you need this entry point for your iOS app. This is also where you should add SwiftUI code for your project.
Build and Run Android Application
To build and run the development version of the Android app, use the run configuration from the run widget in your IDE’s toolbar or build it directly from the terminal:
- on macOS/Linux
./gradlew :composeApp:assembleDebug - on Windows
.\gradlew.bat :composeApp:assembleDebug
Build and Run Desktop (JVM) Application
To build and run the development version of the desktop app, use the run configuration from the run widget in your IDE’s toolbar or run it directly from the terminal:
- on macOS/Linux
./gradlew :composeApp:run - on Windows
.\gradlew.bat :composeApp:run
Build and Run Web Application
To build and run the development version of the web app, use the run configuration from the run widget in your IDE's toolbar or run it directly from the terminal:
- for the Wasm target (faster, modern browsers):
- on macOS/Linux
./gradlew :composeApp:wasmJsBrowserDevelopmentRun - on Windows
.\gradlew.bat :composeApp:wasmJsBrowserDevelopmentRun
- on macOS/Linux
- for the JS target (slower, supports older browsers):
- on macOS/Linux
./gradlew :composeApp:jsBrowserDevelopmentRun - on Windows
.\gradlew.bat :composeApp:jsBrowserDevelopmentRun
- on macOS/Linux
Build and Run iOS Application
To build and run the development version of the iOS app, use the run configuration from the run widget in your IDE’s toolbar or open the /iosApp directory in Xcode and run it from there.
Learn more about Kotlin Multiplatform, Compose Multiplatform, Kotlin/Wasm…
We would appreciate your feedback on Compose/Web and Kotlin/Wasm in the public Slack channel #compose-web. If you face any issues, please report them on YouTrack.