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Simplifying Application Development with Kotlin Multiplatform Mobile

You're reading from  Simplifying Application Development with Kotlin Multiplatform Mobile

Product type Book
Published in Mar 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801812580
Pages 184 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Róbert Nagy Róbert Nagy
Profile icon Róbert Nagy

Table of Contents (15) Chapters

Preface 1. Section 1 - Getting Started with Multiplatform Mobile Development Using Kotlin
2. Chapter 1: The Battle Between Native, Cross-Platform, and Multiplatform 3. Chapter 2: Exploring the Three Compilers of Kotlin Multiplatform 4. Chapter 3: Introducing Kotlin for Swift Developers 5. Section 2 - Code Sharing between Android and iOS
6. Chapter 4: Introducing the KMM Learning Project 7. Chapter 5: Writing Shared Code 8. Chapter 6: Writing the Android Consumer App 9. Chapter 7: Writing an iOS Consumer App 10. Section 3 - Supercharging Yourself for the Next Steps
11. Chapter 8: Exploring Tips and Best Practices 12. Chapter 9: Integrating KMM into Existing Android and iOS Apps 13. Chapter 10: Summary and Your Next Steps 14. Other Books You May Enjoy

Understanding Kotlin coroutines

Asynchronous programming is at the heart of mobile development. In order to write efficient applications, leveraging the async capabilities of the framework and language you are using makes all the difference.

Coroutines are my absolute favorite language feature of Kotlin because of their expressiveness and how easy it is to express your asynchronous development needs in a concise way.

In this section, we will be covering the basic concepts of coroutines and compare them to Swift's async/await and Combine patterns.

Suspend functions

Coroutines are basically suspendable tasks that can suspend and resume execution, and they are not bound to any particular thread.

When you're writing asynchronous code, you generally need to think about the following two things:

  • Which task needs asynchronous attention and has to be suspendable
  • How you combine asynchronous tasks with the rest of your code

Let's see how you...

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