Book Image

Learn Kotlin Programming - Second Edition

By : Stephen Samuel, Stefan Bocutiu
Book Image

Learn Kotlin Programming - Second Edition

By: Stephen Samuel, Stefan Bocutiu

Overview of this book

Kotlin is a general-purpose programming language used for developing cross-platform applications. Complete with a comprehensive introduction and projects covering the full set of Kotlin programming features, this book will take you through the fundamentals of Kotlin and get you up to speed in no time. Learn Kotlin Programming covers the installation, tools, and how to write basic programs in Kotlin. You'll learn how to implement object-oriented programming in Kotlin and easily reuse your program or parts of it. The book explains DSL construction, serialization, null safety aspects, and type parameterization to help you build robust apps. You'll learn how to destructure expressions and write your own. You'll then get to grips with building scalable apps by exploring advanced topics such as testing, concurrency, microservices, coroutines, and Kotlin DSL builders. Furthermore, you'll be introduced to the kotlinx.serialization framework, which is used to persist objects in JSON, Protobuf, and other formats. By the end of this book, you'll be well versed with all the new features in Kotlin and will be able to build robust applications skillfully.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Section 1: Fundamental Concepts in Kotlin
5
Section 2: Practical Concepts in Kotlin
15
Section 3: Advanced Concepts in Kotlin

Closures

In functional programming, a closure is a function that has access to variables and parameters defined in outer scopes. It is said that they close over these variables, hence the name closure.

Let's consider an example where we wish to load names from a database and filter them to only include those that match some search criteria. We will use our old friend, the filter method:

    class Student(val firstName: String, val lastName: String) 
 
    fun loadStudents(): List = ...
       //  load from database
 
    fun students(nameToMatch: String): List<Student> { 
      return loadStudents().filter {  
        it.lastName == nameToMatch 
      } 
    } 

Note that the function literal passed to the filter method uses the parameter to the outer function. This parameter is defined in an outer scope to the function, so the function is closing over the parameter...