Book Image

Kotlin Design Patterns and Best Practices - Second Edition

By : Alexey Soshin
Book Image

Kotlin Design Patterns and Best Practices - Second Edition

By: Alexey Soshin

Overview of this book

This book shows you how easy it can be to implement traditional design patterns in the modern multi-paradigm Kotlin programming language, and takes you through the new patterns and paradigms that have emerged. This second edition is updated to cover the changes introduced from Kotlin 1.2 up to 1.5 and focuses more on the idiomatic usage of coroutines, which have become a stable language feature. You'll begin by learning about the practical aspects of smarter coding in Kotlin, as well as understanding basic Kotlin syntax and the impact of design patterns on your code. The book also provides an in-depth explanation of the classical design patterns, such as Creational, Structural, and Behavioral families, before moving on to functional programming. You'll go through reactive and concurrent patterns, and finally, get to grips with coroutines and structured concurrency to write performant, extensible, and maintainable code. By the end of this Kotlin book, you'll have explored the latest trends in architecture and design patterns for microservices. You’ll also understand the tradeoffs when choosing between different architectures and make informed decisions.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
1
Section 1: Classical Patterns
6
Section 2: Reactive and Concurrent Patterns
11
Section 3: Practical Application of Design Patterns

Exploring concurrent data structures

Now we're familiar with some of the most common higher-order functions on collections, let's combine this knowledge with what we learned in the previous chapter about concurrency primitives in Kotlin to discuss the concurrent data structures Kotlin provides.

The two most essential concurrent data structures are channels and flows. However, before we can discuss them, we need to look at another data structure: sequences. While this data structure is not concurrent itself, it will provide us with a bridge into the concurrent world.

Sequences

Higher-order functions on collections existed in many functional programming languages for a long time. But for Java developers, the higher-order functions for collections first appeared in Java 8 with the introduction of the Stream API.

Despite providing developers with valuable functions such as map(), filter(), and some of the others we already discussed, there were two major drawbacks...