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Kotlin Blueprints

Kotlin Blueprints

By : Belagali, Trivedi, Akshay Chordiya
4.5 (2)
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Kotlin Blueprints

Kotlin Blueprints

4.5 (2)
By: Belagali, Trivedi, Akshay Chordiya

Overview of this book

Kotlin is a powerful language that has applications in a wide variety of fields. It is a concise, safe, interoperable, and tool-friendly language. The Android team has also announced first-class support for Kotlin, which is an added boost to the language. Kotlin’s growth is fueled through carefully designed business and technology benefits. The collection of projects demonstrates the versatility of the language and enables you to build standalone applications on your own. You’ll build comprehensive applications using the various features of Kotlin. Scale, performance, and high availability lie at the heart of the projects, and the lessons learned throughout this book. You’ll learn how to build a social media aggregator app that will help you efficiently track various feeds, develop a geospatial webservice with Kotlin and Spring Boot, build responsive web applications with Kotlin, build a REST API for a news feed reader, and build a server-side chat application with Kotlin. It also covers the various libraries and frameworks used in the projects. Through the course of building applications, you’ll not only get to grips with the various features of Kotlin, but you’ll also discover how to design and prototype professional-grade applications.
Table of Contents (9 chapters)
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What this book covers

Chapter 1, The Power of Kotlin, is the introductory chapter. It covers why Kotlin is quickly becoming a force to reckon with. Kotlin positions itself as the smart choice to the various stakeholders, such as the programmer, the manager, and the businesses. The chapter looks at the technology and business reasons that fuel the adoption of Kotlin. 

Chapter 2, Geospatial Messenger – Spring Boot, covers the use of Spring Boot technology to create robust server-side applications. Spring is one of the most well-known and well-respected server-side frameworks in the Java space, and Spring Boot is its less verbose and more powerful version. This chapter covers how a Geospatial Messenger application is created with Spring Boot technology using the Kotlin language.

Chapter 3, Social Media Aggregator Android App, is using Kotlin to create native Android apps. With Google officially recognizing Kotlin's use to develop Android apps, this is the most widespread application to use the Kotlin language. Today's mobile apps hardly work in isolation. They work with a server. This common scenario is illustrated with a social media aggregator app.

Chapter 4, Weather App Using Kotlin for JavaScript, explores the use of Kotlin to create rich internet apps that work within the browser. JavaScript is clearly the de facto standard language that works across all the browsers. However, Kotlin is clearly superior to JavaScript in many ways. This chapter shows how one can have the best of both worlds by doing the coding in Kotlin and, then, transpiling the code to JavaScript so that it works with the browsers seamlessly. The example that we will build is a simple weather application.

Chapter 5, Chat Application with Server-Side JavaScript Generation, explores how the same facility of transpiling Kotlin to Javascript can be used on the server side. JavaScript is used on the server side within the popular and fast Node.js framework. Kotlin can be used to create Node.js applications, as the JavaScript code that runs with Node.js can be generated from it. This chapter shows how to do so by creating a simple chat application.

Chapter 6, News Feed – REST API, covers the use of Kotlin specifically to create REST services. We will develop a News Feed application with the Ktor framework, which is a leading Kotlin-only framework used for server-side applications.

Chapter 7, CSV Reader in Kotlin Native, explores a bleeding edge technology—Kotlin Native—which is about compiling Kotlin code directly to platform-specific executables. Although not mature, Kotlin Native is worth watching as it quickly marches to its promise of becoming the only language to create native applications across disparate platforms such as iOS and Raspberry Pi. In this chapter, a small CSV reader utility is built with Kotlin/Native.

Chapter 8, Dictionary Desktop Application - Tornado FX, is about using Kotlin to create a cross-platform desktop application based on Java technology. Tornado FX is a Kotlin-specific framework, which is based on the most advanced Java GUI framework, that is, Java FX. This chapter illustrates the power of Tornado FX with a dictionary application.

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