Book Image

Android Programming with Kotlin for Beginners

By : John Horton
5 (1)
Book Image

Android Programming with Kotlin for Beginners

5 (1)
By: John Horton

Overview of this book

Android is the most popular mobile operating system in the world and Kotlin has been declared by Google as a first-class programming language to build Android apps. With the imminent arrival of the most anticipated Android update, Android 10 (Q), this book gets you started building apps compatible with the latest version of Android. It adopts a project-style approach, where we focus on teaching the fundamentals of Android app development and the essentials of Kotlin by building three real-world apps and more than a dozen mini-apps. The book begins by giving you a strong grasp of how Kotlin and Android work together before gradually moving onto exploring the various Android APIs for building stunning apps for Android with ease. You will learn to make your apps more presentable using different layouts. You will dive deep into Kotlin programming concepts such as variables, functions, data structures, Object-Oriented code, and how to connect your Kotlin code to the UI. You will learn to add multilingual text so that your app is accessible to millions of more potential users. You will learn how animation, graphics, and sound effects work and are implemented in your Android app. By the end of the book, you will have sound knowledge about significant Kotlin programming concepts and start building your own fully featured Android apps.
Table of Contents (33 chapters)
Android Programming with Kotlin for Beginners
Contributors
Preface
Index

Manipulating bitmaps


Quite often, however, we need to draw bitmaps in a rotated or otherwise altered state. It is quite easy to use Photoshop, or whatever your favorite image editing software happens to be and create more bitmaps from the original bitmap to face other directions. Then, when we come to draw our bitmap, we can simply decide which way and draw the appropriate pre-loaded bitmap.

However, I think it will be much more interesting and instructive if we work with just the one single source image and learn about the class that Android provides to manipulate images with our Kotlin code. You will then be able to add rotating and inverting graphics to your app developer's toolkit.

What is a bitmap?

A bitmap is called a bitmap because that is exactly what it is: a map of bits. While there are many bitmap formats that use different ranges and values to represent colors and transparency, they all amount to the same thing. They are a grid or map of values and each value represents the color...