Book Image

Kotlin for Enterprise Applications using Java EE

By : Raghavendra Rao K
Book Image

Kotlin for Enterprise Applications using Java EE

By: Raghavendra Rao K

Overview of this book

Kotlin was developed with a view to solving programmers’ difficulties and operational challenges. This book guides you in making Kotlin and Java EE work in unison to build enterprise-grade applications. Together, they can be used to create services of any size with just a few lines of code and let you focus on the business logic. Kotlin for Enterprise Applications using Java EE begins with a brief tour of Kotlin and helps you understand what makes it a popular and reasonable choice of programming language for application development, followed by its incorporation in the Java EE platform. We will then learn how to build applications using the Java Persistence API (JPA) and Enterprise JavaBeans (EJB), as well as develop RESTful web services and MicroServices. As we work our way through the chapters, we’ll use various performance improvement and monitoring tools for your application and see how they optimize real-world applications. At each step along the way, we will see how easy it is to develop enterprise applications in Kotlin. By the end of this book, we will have learned design patterns and how to implement them using Kotlin.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)

Working with coroutines

A program in execution that initiates long-running operations, such as file IO, network IO, or CPU- or GPU-intensive work, requires the invoker to block until the operations complete. Programming languages handle this via concurrency.

The JVM has support for concurrency. Java has had strong support for multithreading and concurrency since its first release. Any process that is running inside the JVM can create a number of threads to execute multiple tasks in an asynchronous fashion. However, developing concurrent code in an optimal and error-free manner and debugging it is really challenging. Java provides various constructs to write concurrent code and, along with other JVM languages and third-party libraries, has tried to come up with innovative and elegant ways to achieve concurrency.

Java 5 made a lot of progress with regard to writing concurrent applications...