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Kotlin Design Patterns and Best Practices

You're reading from   Kotlin Design Patterns and Best Practices Build scalable applications using traditional, reactive, and concurrent design patterns in Kotlin

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801815727
Length 356 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Author (1):
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Alexey Soshin Alexey Soshin
Author Profile Icon Alexey Soshin
Alexey Soshin
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Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

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

Scheduler

The goal of the Scheduler design pattern is to decouple what is being run from how it's being run and optimize the use of resources when doing so.

In Kotlin, Dispatchers are an implementation of the Scheduler design pattern that decouple the coroutine (that is, the what) from underlying thread pools (that is, the how).

We've already seen dispatchers briefly in Chapter 6, Threads and Coroutines.

To remind you, the coroutine builders such as launch() and async() can specify which dispatcher to use. Here's an example of how you specify it explicitly:

runBlocking {
    // This will use the Dispatcher from the parent 
    // coroutine
    launch {
        // Prints: main
        println(Thread.currentThread().name) 
    }
    launch(Dispatchers.Default) {
   ...
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