Book Image

Kotlin Standard Library Cookbook

By : Samuel Urbanowicz
Book Image

Kotlin Standard Library Cookbook

By: Samuel Urbanowicz

Overview of this book

For developers who prefer a more simplistic approach to coding, Kotlin has emerged as a valuable solution for effective software development. The Kotlin standard library provides vital tools that make day-to-day Kotlin programming easier. This library features core attributes of the language, such as algorithmic problems, design patterns, data processing, and working with files and data streams. With a recipe-based approach, this book features coding solutions that you can readily execute. Through the book, you’ll encounter a variety of interesting topics related to data processing, I/O operations, and collections transformation. You’ll get started by exploring the most effective design patterns in Kotlin and understand how coroutines add new features to JavaScript. As you progress, you'll learn how to implement clean, reusable functions and scalable interfaces containing default implementations. Toward the concluding chapters, you’ll discover recipes on functional programming concepts, such as lambdas, monads, functors, and Kotlin scoping functions, which will help you tackle a range of real-life coding problems. By the end of this book, you'll be equipped with the expertise you need to address a range of challenges that Kotlin developers face by implementing easy-to-follow solutions.
Table of Contents (11 chapters)

Renaming generated functions

In this recipe, we are going to learn how to modify a Kotlin function's name when it is being compiled to the generated JVM bytecode. We need this feature because of the type-erasure that happens when generating the JVM bytecode. However, thanks to the @JvmName annotation, we can declare a number of different functions, but that has the same name and use their original name in the Kotlin code while keeping their JVM bytecode names distinct to satisfy the compiler.

How to do it...

  1. Declare two functions that have the same names:
fun List<String>.join(): String {
return joinToString()
}

fun List<Int>.join(): String =
map { it.toString() }
.joinToString()
  1. Mark...