At Google I/O 2019, we announced that Android development will be
increasingly Kotlin-first, and we’ve stood by that commitment. Kotlin is an
expressive and concise programming language that reduces common code errors
and easily integrates into existing apps. If you’re looking to build an
Android app, we recommend starting with Kotlin to take advantage of its
best-in-class features.
In an effort to support Android development using Kotlin, we co-founded the
Kotlin Foundation
and have ongoing investments in improving compiler performance and build
speed. To learn more about Android's commitment to being Kotlin-first, see
Android's commitment to Kotlin
.
Why is Android development Kotlin-first?
We reviewed feedback that came directly from developers at conferences, our
Customer Advisory Board (CAB), Google Developer Experts (GDE), and through
our developer research. Many developers already enjoy using Kotlin, and the
request for more Kotlin support was clear. Here’s what developers appreciate
about writing in Kotlin:
- Expressive and concise:
You can do more with less. Express your ideas
and reduce the amount of boilerplate code. 67% of professional developers who
use Kotlin say Kotlin has increased their productivity.
- Safer code:
Kotlin has many language features to help you avoid common
programming mistakes such as null pointer exceptions.
Android apps that contain Kotlin code are 20% less likely to crash.
- Interoperable:
Call Java-based code from Kotlin, or call Kotlin from
Java-based code. Kotlin is 100% interoperable with the Java programming
language, so you can have as little or as much of Kotlin in your project
as you want.
- Structured Concurrency:
Kotlin coroutines make asynchronous code as
easy to work with as blocking code. Coroutines dramatically simplify
background task management for everything from network calls to
accessing local data.
What does Kotlin-first mean?
When building new Android development tools and content, such as Jetpack
libraries, samples, documentation, and training content, we will design
them with Kotlin users in mind while continuing to provide support for
using our APIs from the Java programming language.
|
Java language
|
Kotlin
|
Platform SDK support
|
Yes
|
Yes
|
Android Studio support
|
Yes
|
Yes
|
Lint
|
Yes
|
Yes
|
Guided docs support
|
Yes
|
Yes
|
API docs support
|
Yes
|
Yes
|
AndroidX support
|
Yes
|
Yes
|
AndroidX Kotlin-specific APIs (KTX, coroutines, and so on)
|
N/A
|
Yes
|
Online training
|
Best effort
|
Yes
|
Samples
|
Best effort
|
Yes
|
Multi-platform projects
|
No
|
Yes
|
Jetpack Compose
|
No
|
Yes
|
Compiler plugin support
|
No
|
Yes - The
Kotlin Symbol
Processing API
was created by Google to develop lightweight
compiler plugins.
|
We use Kotlin, too!
Our engineers enjoy the language features Kotlin offers, and today over 70 of
Google's apps are built using Kotlin. This includes apps like Maps, Home, Play,
Drive, and Messages. One example of success comes from the
Google Home team
, where migrating new feature
development to Kotlin resulted in a 33% reduction in codebase size and a 30%
reduction in the number of NPE crashes.
To learn more about Kotlin on Android, see the
Kotlin on Android FAQ
.