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Kotlin Design Patterns and Best Practices

You're reading from   Kotlin Design Patterns and Best Practices Elevate your Kotlin skills with classical and modern design patterns, coroutines, and microservices

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781805127765
Length 474 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
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Author (1):
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Alexey Soshin Alexey Soshin
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Alexey Soshin
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Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Classical Patterns
2. Getting Started with Kotlin FREE CHAPTER 3. Working with Creational Patterns 4. Understanding Structural Patterns 5. Getting Familiar with Behavioral Patterns 6. Section 2: Reactive and Concurrent Patterns
7. Introducing Functional Programming 8. Threads and Coroutines 9. Controlling the Data Flow 10. Designing for Concurrency 11. Section 3: Practical Application of Design Patterns
12. Idioms and Anti-Patterns 13. Practical Functional Programming with Arrow 14. Concurrent Microservices with Ktor 15. Reactive Microservices with Vert.x 16. Assessments
17. Other Book You May Enjoy
18. Index

Practical Functional Programming with Arrow

After discussing the functional programming principles in Kotlin, the concurrency primitives, and some of the concurrent design patterns, we can now investigate more pragmatic applications of those topics using the Arrow library for Kotlin as an example. Arrow aims to bring idiomatic functional programming to Kotlin. This means Arrow is inspired by the great work done in other functional programming communities, such as Scala, yet it exposes these ideas and concepts in ways that feel natural to Kotlin programmers.

Arrow comprises different libraries, each improving or extending a commonly used library in the Kotlin ecosystem or a particular Kotlin language feature.

In this chapter, we’ll cover the following topics:

  • Getting started with Arrow
  • Typed errors
  • High-level concurrency
  • Software transactional memory
  • Resilience
  • Circuit Breaker
  • Saga
  • Immutable data

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