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someone to help me find my way back into publishing. I'm incredibly grateful.

      On the Wiley side, Brad Jones was more patient than he ever should have been. Thanks, Brad! Barath Kumar Rajasekaran handled a million tiny details, and Pete Gaughan and Devon Lewis kept the train on the tracks. Christine O'Connor handled production, and Jason Lee caught the technical mistakes in the text that you wouldn't want to stumble over. Seriously, Jason in particular made this a much better book with his keen eye.

      As usual, it's an author's family that pays the highest price. Long days, more than a few weekends and evenings, and a constant support keep us going. My wife, Leigh, is the best, and my kids, Dean, Robbie, and Addie, always make finishing one of these a joy.

      Let's do brunch, everyone! Mimosas and breakfast tacos are on me.

      —BRETT MCLAUGHLIN

      For decades, the Java programming language has been the dominant force in compiled languages. While there have been plenty of alternatives, it's Java that has remained core to so many applications, from desktop to server-side to mobile. This has become especially true for Android mobile development.

      Finally, though, there is a real contender to at least live comfortably beside Java: Kotlin, a modern programming language shepherded by JetBrains (www.jetbrains.com). It is not Java, but is completely interoperable with it. Kotlin feels a lot like Java, and will be easy to learn for developers already familiar with the Java language, but offers several nice improvements.

      Further, Kotlin is a full-blown programming language. It's not just for mobile applications, or a visual language that focuses on one specific application. Kotlin supports:

       Inheritance, interfaces, implementations, and class hierarchies

       Control and flow structures, both simple and complex

       Lambdas and scope functions

       Rich support for generics while still preserving strong typing

       Idiomatic approaches to development, giving Kotlin a “feel” all its own

      You'll also learn that while Kotlin is a new language, it doesn't feel particularly new. That's largely because it builds upon Java, and doesn't try to reinvent wheels. Rather, Kotlin reflects lessons that thousands of programmers coding in Java (and other languages) employ on a daily basis. Kotlin takes many of those lessons and makes them part of the language, enforcing strong typing and a strict compiler that may take some getting used to, but often produces cleaner and safer code.

      There's also an emphasis in Kotlin, and therefore in this book, on understanding inheritance. Whether you're using packages from third parties, working with the standard Kotlin libraries, or building your own programs, you need a solid understanding of how classes interrelate, how subclassing works, and how to use abstract classes along with interfaces to define behavior and ensure that behavior is implemented. By the time you're through with this book, you'll be extremely comfortable with classes, objects, and building inheritance trees.

      The Kotlin website (kotlinlang.org) describes Kotlin as “a modern programming language that makes developers happier.” With Kotlin and this book, you'll be happier and more productive in your Kotlin programming.

      This book takes a holistic approach to teaching you the Kotlin programming language, from a beginner to a confident, complete Kotlin developer. By the time you're finished, you'll be able to write Kotlin applications in a variety of contexts, from desktop to server-side to mobile.

      WILL THIS BOOK TEACH ME TO PROGRAM MOBILE APPLICATIONS IN KOTLIN?

      Yes, but you'll need more than just this book to build rich mobile applications in Kotlin. Kotlin is a rich language, and while there are books on all the packages needed to build mobile languages, this is fundamentally a book on learning Kotlin from the ground up. You'll get a handle on how Kotlin deals with generics, inheritance, and lambdas, all critical to mobile programming.

      You can then take these concepts and extend them into mobile programming. You can easily add the specifics of Android-related packages to your Kotlin base knowledge, and use those mobile packages far more effectively than if you didn't have the fundamentals down.

      If you are anxious to begin your mobile programming journey sooner, consider picking up a book focused on Kotlin mobile programming, and hop back and forth. Read and work through Chapter 1 of this book, and then do the same for the book focused on mobile programming. You'll have to context switch a bit more, but you'll be learning fundamentals alongside specific mobile techniques.

       Chapter 1: Objects All the Way Down This chapter takes you from getting Kotlin installed to writing your first Kotlin program. You'll learn about functions from the start, and how to interact with the command line through a not-quite “Hello, World!” application. You'll also immediately begin to see the role of objects and classes in Kotlin, and refine your understanding of what a class is, what an object is, and what an object instance is.

       Chapter 2: It's Hard to Break Kotlin This chapter delves into one of the distinguishing features of Kotlin: its rigid stance on type safety. You'll learn about Kotlin's types and begin to grasp choosing the right type for the right task. You'll also get familiar with val and var and how Kotlin allows for change.

       Chapter 3: Kotlin Is Extremely Classy Like any object-oriented language, much of your work with Kotlin will be writing classes. This chapter digs into classes in Kotlin and looks at the basic building blocks of all Kotlin objects. You'll also override some functions and get deep into some of the most fundamental of Kotlin functions: equals() and hashCode().

       Chapter 4: Inheritance Matters This chapter begins a multichapter journey into Kotlin inheritance. You'll learn about Kotlin's constructors and the relatively unique concept of secondary constructors. You'll also learn more about the Any class, understand that inheritance is truly essential for all Kotlin programming, and learn why writing good superclasses is one of the most important skills you can develop in all your programming learning.

       Chapter 5: Lists and Sets and Maps, Oh My! This chapter moves away (briefly) from classes and inheritance to add Kotlin collections to your arsenal. You'll use these collection classes over and over in your programming, so understanding how a Set is different from a Map, and how both are different from a List, is essential. You'll also dig further into Kotlin mutability and immutability—when data can and cannot change—as well as a variety of ways to iterate over collections of all types.

       Chapter 6: The Future (in Kotlin) Is Generic Generics are a difficult and nuanced topic in most programming languages. They require a deep understanding of how languages are built. This chapter gets into those depths, and provides you more flexibility in building classes that can be used in a variety of contexts than possible without generics. You'll also learn about covariance, contravariance, and invariance. These might not be the hot topics at the water cooler, but they'll be key to building programs that use generics correctly, and also level up your understanding of inheritance and subclassing.

       Chapter 7: Flying through Control Structures Control structures are the bread and butter


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