Google-backed Kotlin Gains Adoption in Open Source Android Apps; Scientists Say It Has Improved Code Quality (theregister.co.uk)
Kotlin, which Google blessed last year as an alternative to Java for programming Android apps, has already made its way into almost 12 per cent of open source Android apps, and in so doing has elevated their code quality. From a report: So we're told by computer scientists Bruno Gois Mateus and Matias Martinez, affiliated with University of Valenciennes in France, who observed that Google at the end of 2017 said Kotlin had infiltrated more than 17 per cent of Android apps developed with its IDE, Android Studio 3.0. Kotlin is an open source statically typed programing language that targets the JVM, Android, JavaScript (transpiling to ES5.1) and native platforms (via LLVM). JetBrains, the company that created it, contends Kotlin is more concise and more type-safe than Java. It estimates that apps written in Kotlin require about 40 per cent less code than they would with Java. With fewer lines of code, in theory, one can expect fewer bugs. In a paper distributed through pre-print service ArXiv, "An Empirical Study on Quality of Android Applications written in Kotlin language," Mateus and Martinez describe how they gathered 925 apps from the open source F-Droid repository, measured the amount of Kotlin code in each, and analyzed the code for "smells" as an indicator of code quality.
Android app dev here. Learning Kotlin, I started off being thoroughly excited about it, especially the nullity checking and other general code safety features. Then I got to the bit about it not having checked exceptions and now have a very mixed opinion.
The arguments against checked exceptions seem to be that 1.) most languages don't have them, 2.) bad programmers will just throw and catch the base "Exception" class everywhere, and 3.) bad programmers will screw up interfaces and the like by putting implementation-specific exceptions in the contract rather than writing appropriate exception classes.
Bad programmers write bad code, and will continue to write bad code. I guess if we "fix" the problem by having good programmers write bad code too, it will technically make the bad programmers average.
Going to try using it on a new project (that won't have checked exceptions as a key component of its design, like my existing stuff) and hope for the best. I still can't get over this seeming like two steps forward, three steps back. I hope I'm wrong, as it otherwise appears to be a great improvement compared to Java.