Book Image

Kotlin Quick Start Guide

By : Marko Devcic
Book Image

Kotlin Quick Start Guide

By: Marko Devcic

Overview of this book

Kotlin is a general purpose, object-oriented language that primarily targets the JVM and Android. Intended as a better alternative to Java, its main goals are high interoperability with Java and increased developer productivity. Kotlin is still a new language and this book will help you to learn the core Kotlin features and get you ready for developing applications with Kotlin. This book covers Kotlin features in detail and explains them with practical code examples.You will learn how to set up the environment and take your frst steps with Kotlin and its syntax. We will cover the basics of the language, including functions, variables, and basic data types. With the basics covered, the next chapters show how functions are first-class citizens in Kotlin and deal with the object-oriented side of Kotlin. You will move on to more advanced features of Kotlin. You will explore Kotlin's Standard Library and learn how to work with the Collections API. The book finishes by putting Kotlin in to practice, showing how to build a desktop app. By the end of this book, you will be confident enough to use Kotlin for your next project.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
Title Page
Copyright and Credits
Dedication
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
Index

Java interoperability


As mentioned before, Java interoperability was one of the main goals during the development of Kotlin and it is implemented seamlessly. You can call from Kotlin existing libraries compiled with Java; you can also extend a class written in Java or implement an interface written in Java and use all its types from the Java Standard Library.

But the best part is that you can have Kotlin side-by-side with the existing Java code. There's nothing preventing you from writing half of your project in Java and the other half in Kotlin.

IDEs (IntelliJ or Eclipse with a Kotlin plugin) support navigating in both Kotlin and Java files in the same project. Also, debugging and stepping through code from a project with both languages is not a problem at all. Refactoring Kotlin or Java code will also correctly update the references in another language as well.

This interoperability is also visible in the Kotlin Standard Library. Standard Library relies heavily on Java Standard Library and extends a lot of types from it. For example, Kotlin doesn't have it's own collections classes, it uses ones from Java. Java library has been battle tested and so it wouldn't make sense to reinvent the wheel.

Java-Kotlin interoperability also works in another direction. You can call functions written in Kotlin from Java, extend types and implement interfaces declared in Kotlin.