This intensive, hands-on course bridges the gap between Java and Kotlin, empowering experienced developers to write cleaner, more expressive code. Through a series of practical exercises directly in the IDE, you will move beyond basic syntax to adopt idiomatic Kotlin, leveraging its seamless interoperability to enhance existing Java projects or build robust new backend and Android applications.
Kotlin for Java Developers

Kotlin for Java Developers

Instructors: Svetlana Isakova
Access provided by New York State Department of Labor
123,655 already enrolled
2,122 reviews
Recommended experience
What you'll learn
Refactor Java to Idiomatic Kotlin: Convert verbose Java patterns into concise Kotlin syntax while maintaining 100% JVM interoperability.
Eliminate NullPointerExceptions: Implement Kotlin’s type system to resolve nullability at compile-time rather than runtime.
Architect Functional Data Pipelines: Use lambdas, receivers, and Sequences to build high-efficiency, expressive logic.
Streamline Data Structures: Use data classes, properties, and generics to eliminate boilerplate and simplify Object-Oriented design.
Skills you'll gain
Tools you'll learn
Details to know

Add to your LinkedIn profile
See how employees at top companies are mastering in-demand skills

There are 5 modules in this course
Instructors

Offered by
Why people choose Coursera for their career

Felipe M.

Jennifer J.

Larry W.

Chaitanya A.
Learner reviews
- 5 stars
75.96%
- 4 stars
18.52%
- 3 stars
3.48%
- 2 stars
0.65%
- 1 star
1.36%
Showing 3 of 2122
Reviewed on Jun 11, 2020
Great work, now i can understand a lot of concepts that i didn't understand before, the course is clear and very well explain with enough examples to reafirm the concept exposed, good job
Reviewed on May 2, 2020
The assignments don't have a detailed explanation. There should be more of code provided with fill the blanks kind of tasks. This would make it much easier and helpful as the assignments are tough.
Reviewed on Jun 13, 2021
Good survey of Kotlin language features. Would have been nice if assignments focused more on Kotlin idioms. Perhaps that's a fundamental issue with using an automated grader?



