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Android Programming with Kotlin for Beginners

You're reading from  Android Programming with Kotlin for Beginners

Product type Book
Published in Apr 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789615401
Pages 698 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
John Horton John Horton
Profile icon John Horton

Table of Contents (33) Chapters

Android Programming with Kotlin for Beginners
Contributors
Preface
1. Getting Started with Android and Kotlin 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 Other Book You May Enjoy Index

OOP and inheritance


We have seen how we can reuse our own code, and other people's code, by instantiating/creating objects from classes. But this whole OOP thing goes even further than that.

What if there is a class that has loads of useful functionality in it, but is not exactly what we want? Think about when we wrote the Carrier class. It was so close to the Destroyer class that we could have almost copy-and-pasted it. We can inherit from a class, and then further refine or add to how it works and what it does.

You might be surprised to hear that we have done this already. In fact, we have done this with every single app we have created. When we use the : syntax, we are inheriting. You may recall this code from the MainActivity class:

class MainActivity : AppCompatActivity() {

Here, we are inheriting from the AppCompatActivity class all its functionality – or, more specifically, all the functionality that the designers of the class want us to have access to.

We can even override a function...

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