Book Image

Learning Java by Building Android Games - Second Edition

By : John Horton
Book Image

Learning Java by Building Android Games - Second Edition

By: John Horton

Overview of this book

Android is one of the most popular mobile operating systems presently. It uses the most popular programming language, Java, as the primary language for building apps of all types. However, this book is unlike other Android books in that it doesn’t assume that you already have Java proficiency. This new and expanded second edition of Learning Java by Building Android Games shows you how to start building Android games from scratch. The difficulty level will grow steadily as you explore key Java topics, such as variables, loops, methods, object oriented programming, and design patterns, including code and examples that are written for Java 9 and Android P. At each stage, you will put what you’ve learned into practice by developing a game. You will build games such as Minesweeper, Retro Pong, Bullet Hell, and Classic Snake and Scrolling Shooter games. In the later chapters, you will create a time-trial, open-world platform game. By the end of the book, you will not only have grasped Java and Android but will also have developed six cool games for the Android platform.
Table of Contents (30 chapters)
Learning Java by Building Android Games Second Edition
Contributors
Preface
Index

Summary


We have covered a lot of ground in this first chapter. We learned why games, Android and Java are a good and potentially profitable way to learn to program. We discovered how Android and Java work together and had a look at the six games that we will build throughout this book. Finally, we got started on the first game, Sub' Hunter and deployed the blank project to the emulator and a real device.

In the next chapter, we will learn the first set of basics for Java and coding in general as well as scratch the surface of some more advanced Java topics that we will keep coming back to throughout the book. These topics include object-oriented programming, classes, objects, and methods as well as how these topics are intimately related.

We can then make sense of the code that Android Studio generated for us (in SubHunter.java) and start to add our own code.