I have a third party Java library which an object with interface like this:
public interface Handler<C> {
void call(C context) throws Exception;
}
How can I concisely implement it in Kotlin similar to Java anonymous class like this:
Handler<MyContext> handler = new Handler<MyContext> {
@Override
public void call(MyContext context) throws Exception {
System.out.println("Hello world");
}
}
handler.call(myContext) // Prints "Hello world"
Assuming the interface has only a single method you can make use of SAM
val handler = Handler<String> { println("Hello: $it")}
If you have a method that accepts a handler then you can even omit type arguments:
fun acceptHandler(handler:Handler<String>){}
acceptHandler(Handler { println("Hello: $it")})
acceptHandler({ println("Hello: $it")})
acceptHandler { println("Hello: $it")}
If the interface has more than one method the syntax is a bit more verbose:
val handler = object: Handler2<String> {
override fun call(context: String?) { println("Call: $context") }
override fun run(context: String?) { println("Run: $context") }
}
The simplest answer probably is the Kotlin's lambda:
val handler = Handler<MyContext> {
println("Hello world")
}
handler.call(myContext) // Prints "Hello world"
I had a case where I did not want to create a var for it but do it inline. The way I achieved it is
funA(object: InterfaceListener {
override fun OnMethod1() {}
override fun OnMethod2() {}
override fun OnPermissionsDeniedForever() {}
})