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Learn Kotlin Programming

You're reading from   Learn Kotlin Programming A comprehensive guide to OOP, functions, concurrency, and coroutines in Kotlin 1.3

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789802351
Length 514 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
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Authors (2):
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Stefan Bocutiu Stefan Bocutiu
Author Profile Icon Stefan Bocutiu
Stefan Bocutiu
Stephen Samuel Stephen Samuel
Author Profile Icon Stephen Samuel
Stephen Samuel
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Toc

Table of Contents (21) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Fundamental Concepts in Kotlin FREE CHAPTER
2. Getting Started with Kotlin 3. Kotlin Basics 4. Object-Oriented Programming in Kotlin 5. Section 2: Practical Concepts in Kotlin
6. Functions in Kotlin 7. Higher-Order Functions and Functional Programming 8. Properties 9. Null Safety, Reflection, and Annotations 10. Generics 11. Data Classes 12. Collections 13. Testing in Kotlin 14. Microservices with Kotlin 15. Section 3: Advanced Concepts in Kotlin
16. Concurrency 17. Coroutines 18. Application of Coroutines 19. Kotlin Serialization 20. Other Books You May Enjoy

Class delegation

You might have already heard about the delegation pattern or at least used it without even knowing it had a name. It allows a type to forward one or more of its method calls to a different type. Therefore, you need two types to achieve this—the delegate and the delegator.

This might sound like it's a proxy pattern, but it isn't. A proxy pattern is meant to provide a placeholder for an instance to get full control while accessing it. Let's say you are writing a UI framework and you start where your abstraction is UIElement. Each of the components defines a getHeight and getWidth. Consider the following diagram:

The following code block shows you the unified modeling language (UML) translated into Kotlin. We defined the UIElement interface with both the Panel and Rectangle classes inheriting the following:

    interface UIElement { 
     ...
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