Book Image

Mastering Kotlin

By : Nate Ebel
Book Image

Mastering Kotlin

By: Nate Ebel

Overview of this book

Using Kotlin without taking advantage of its power and interoperability is like owning a sports car and never taking it out of the garage. While documentation and introductory resources can help you learn the basics of Kotlin, the fact that it’s a new language means that there are limited learning resources and code bases available in comparison to Java and other established languages. This Kotlin book will show you how to leverage software designs and concepts that have made Java the most dominant enterprise programming language. You’ll understand how Kotlin is a modern approach to object-oriented programming (OOP). This book will take you through the vast array of features that Kotlin provides over other languages. These features include seamless interoperability with Java, efficient syntax, built-in functional programming constructs, and support for creating your own DSL. Finally, you will gain an understanding of implementing practical design patterns and best practices to help you master the Kotlin language. By the end of the book, you'll have obtained an advanced understanding of Kotlin in order to be able to build production-grade applications.
Table of Contents (25 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Section 1: Kotlin – A Modern Solution to Application Development
4
Section 2: Putting the Pieces Together – Modeling Data, Managing State, and Application Architecture
8
Section 3: Play Nice – Integrating Kotlin With Existing Code
13
Section 4: Go Beyond – Exploring Advanced and Experimental Language Features
17
Section 5: The Wide World of Kotlin – Using Kotlin across the Entire Development Stack

Summary

In this chapter, we've revisited a handful of common software design patterns and seen first hand how Kotlin makes the implementation and utilization of these patterns very easy. We saw how Kotlin provides first-party support for the Singleton pattern through the use of object classes. We explored how to implement the Factory pattern using companion objects. We examined how the use of named arguments and default parameter values enables us to forgo the traditional Builder pattern implementation in favor of simple functions. And finally, we explored how Kotlin's support of higher-order functions simplifies the implementation of the Strategy pattern.

Whether it's the patterns shown in this chapter, or your own favorite design patterns, Kotlin enables developers to reimagine existing patterns or conventions from popular languages such as Java in order to write...