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Android Programming with Kotlin for Beginners

You're reading from   Android Programming with Kotlin for Beginners Build Android apps starting from zero programming experience with the new Kotlin programming language

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789615401
Length 698 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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John Horton John Horton
Author Profile Icon John Horton
John Horton
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Toc

Table of Contents (31) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with Android and Kotlin FREE CHAPTER 2. Kotlin, XML, and the UI Designer 3. Exploring Android Studio and the Project Structure 4. Getting Started with Layouts and Material Design 5. Beautiful Layouts with CardView and ScrollView 6. The Android Lifecycle 7. Kotlin Variables, Operators, and Expressions 8. Kotlin Decisions and Loops 9. Kotlin Functions 10. Object-Oriented Programming 11. Inheritance in Kotlin 12. Connecting Our Kotlin to the UI and Nullability 13. Bringing Android Widgets to Life 14. Android Dialog Windows 15. Handling Data and Generating Random Numbers 16. Adapters and Recyclers 17. Data Persistence and Sharing 18. Localization 19. Animations and Interpolations 20. Drawing Graphics 21. Threads and Starting the Live Drawing App 22. Particle Systems and Handling Screen Touches 23. Android Sound Effects and the Spinner Widget 24. Design Patterns, Multiple Layouts, and Fragments 25. Advanced UI with Paging and Swiping 26. Advanced UI with Navigation Drawer and Fragment 27. Android Databases 28. A Quick Chat Before You Go A. Other Book You May Enjoy Index

Introducing OOP


In Chapter 1, Getting Started with Android and Kotlin, we mentioned that Kotlin was an object-oriented language. An object-oriented language requires us to use OOP; it isn't an optional extra, it's part of Kotlin.

Let's find out a little bit more.

What is OOP exactly?

OOP is a way of programming that involves breaking our requirements down into chunks that are more manageable than the whole.

Each chunk is self-contained, and potentially reusable, by other programs, while working together as a whole with the other chunks.

These chunks are what we have been referring to as objects. When we plan/code an object, we do so with a class. A class can be thought of as the blueprint of an object.

We implement an object of a class. This is called an instance of a class. Think about a house blueprint – you can't live in it, but you can build a house from it; so, you build an instance of it. Often, when we design classes for our apps, we write them to represent real-world things.

However, OOP...

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