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Android Programming for Beginners

You're reading from   Android Programming for Beginners Build in-depth, full-featured Android 9 Pie apps starting from zero programming experience

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789538502
Length 766 pages
Edition 2nd 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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Table of Contents (33) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Beginning Android and Java 2. First Contact – Java, XML, and the UI Designer FREE CHAPTER 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. Java Variables, Operators, and Expressions 8. Java Decisions and Loops 9. Java Methods 10. Object-Oriented programming 11. More Object-Oriented Programming 12. The Stack, the Heap, and the Garbage Collector 13. Anonymous Classes – Bringing Android Widgets to Life 14. Android Dialog Windows 15. Arrays, ArrayList, Map and 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. Supporting Different Versions of 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. Coding a Snake Game Using Everything We Have Learned So Far 29. Enumerations and Finishing the Snake Game 30. A Quick Chat Before You Go Other Books You May Enjoy Index

More Java Collections – Meet Java Hashmap

Java HashMaps are neat. They are part of the Java Collections, and they are a kind of cousin to ArrayList, which we will use in the Note to Self project during the next chapter. They basically encapsulate useful data storage techniques that would otherwise be quite technical for us to code successfully for ourselves.

I thought it would be worth taking a first look at HashMap on its own.

Suppose we want to store the data of lots of characters from a role-playing game, and each different character is represented by an object of type Character.

We could use some of the Java tools we already know about, such as arrays or ArrayList. However, Java HashMap is also like these things, but with HashMap we can give a unique key/identifier to each Character object and access any such object using that key/identifier.

Note

The term "hash" comes from the process of turning our chosen key/identifier into something used internally by the HashMap class...

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