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Kotlin Programming Cookbook

You're reading from   Kotlin Programming Cookbook Explore more than 100 recipes that show how to build robust mobile and web applications with Kotlin, Spring Boot, and Android

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2018
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781788472142
Length 434 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (2):
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Aanand Shekhar Roy Aanand Shekhar Roy
Author Profile Icon Aanand Shekhar Roy
Aanand Shekhar Roy
Rashi Karanpuria Rashi Karanpuria
Author Profile Icon Rashi Karanpuria
Rashi Karanpuria
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Toc

Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Installation and Working with Environment FREE CHAPTER 2. Control Flow 3. Classes and Objects 4. Functions 5. Object-Oriented Programming 6. Collections Framework 7. Handling File Operations in Kotlin 8. Anko Commons and Extension Function 9. Anko Layouts 10. Databases and Dependency Injection 11. Networking and Concurrency 12. Lambdas and Delegates 13. Testing 14. Web Services with Kotlin 15. Other Books You May Enjoy

Working with interfaces in Kotlin


Interfaces in OOP are like the contract. They define the behavior or rules. The classes that implement them need to do so in order to conform to the behavior defined by interfaces. However, that's not it. Interfaces in Kotlin provide much more. Prior to Java 8, we couldn't have the implementation of methods in the interfaces, but in Kotlin, we can have that too! In this recipe, we will see how to deal with interfaces in Kotlin.

Getting ready

I'll be using IntelliJ IDEA for writing and executing code. You are free to use any IDE where you can run the Kotlin code.

How to do it…

As we have just discussed, interfaces in Kotlin can have the implementation of methods; let's follow these mentioned steps to check that out:

  1. Let's create an interface named DemoInterface:
interface DemoInterface {

    fun implementatedMethod() {
        println("From demo interface")
    }
}

Defining a method with implementation in the interface is just like you would do inside a class.

  1. Now...
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