Accessing Kotlin extension functions from Java

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梦毁少年i
梦毁少年i 2020-11-29 21:27

Is it possible to access extension functions from Java code?

I defined the extension function in a Kotlin file.

package com.test.extensions

import c         


        
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  • 2020-11-29 21:40

    You can always see the actual Java code which is getting generated from your Kotlin code by going to Tools > Kotlin > Show Kotlin Bytecode, then clicking Decompile. This can help you tremendously. In your case the Java code will look like this if you have MyModelExtensions.kt

    public final class MyModelExtensionsKt {
       public static final int bar(@NotNull MyModel $receiver) {
          Intrinsics.checkParameterIsNotNull($receiver, "$receiver");
          return $receiver.getName().length();
       }
    }
    

    you can improve over this by using @JvmName on the file containing bar:

    @file:JvmName("MyModels")
    package io.sspinc.datahub.transformation
    
    public fun MyModel.bar(): Int {
        return this.name.length
    }
    

    and it will result in this code:

    public final class MyModels {
       public static final int bar(@NotNull MyModel $receiver) {
          Intrinsics.checkParameterIsNotNull($receiver, "$receiver");
          return $receiver.getName().length();
       }
    }
    

    Using MyModels is in line with what Effective Java suggests for utility classes. You can also rename your method like this:

    public fun MyModel.extractBar(): Int {
        return this.name.length
    }
    

    then from the Java side it will look idiomatic:

    MyModels.extractBar(model);
    
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  • 2020-11-29 21:42

    When you extend a class like this:

    fun String.concatenatedLength(str: String): Int {
        return (this.length + str.length)
    }
    
    fun f() {
        var len = "one string".concatenatedLength("another string")
        println(len)
    }
    

    It will compile to this:

    import kotlin.jvm.internal.Intrinsics;
    import org.jetbrains.annotations.NotNull;
    
    public final class ExampleKt {
      public static final int concatenatedLength(@NotNull String $receiver, @NotNull String str) {
        Intrinsics.checkParameterIsNotNull((Object) $receiver, (String) "$receiver");
        Intrinsics.checkParameterIsNotNull((Object) str, (String) "str");
        return $receiver.length() + str.length();
      }
    
      public static final void f() {
        int len = ExampleKt.concatenatedLength("one string", "another string");
        System.out.println(len);
      }
    }
    

    There are more examples here.

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  • 2020-11-29 21:43

    It works for me:

    Kotlin

    Java code

    My project is an old android project created with Java; now I created the first kotlin file and added String extensions fun String.isNotNullOrEmpty(): Boolean {... }

    and I could call it from java file using: StringUtilsKt.isNotNullOrEmpty(thestring).

    My kotlin file name is StringUtils

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  • 2020-11-29 21:44

    Kotlin top-level extension function are compiled as Java static methods.

    Given Kotlin file Extensions.kt in package foo.bar containing:

    fun String.bar(): Int {
        ...
    }
    

    The equivalent Java code would be:

    package foo.bar;
    
    class ExtensionsKt {
        public static int bar(String receiver) { 
            ...
        }
    }
    

    Unless, that is, Extensions.kt contained the line

    @file:JvmName("DemoUtils")
    

    In which case the Java static class would be named DemoUtils

    In Kotlin, extension methods can be declared in other ways. (For example, as a member function or as an extension of a companion object.)

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  • 2020-11-29 21:45

    All Kotlin functions declared in a file will be compiled by default to static methods in a class within the same package and with a name derived from the Kotlin source file (First letter capitalized and ".kt" extension replaced with the "Kt" suffix). Methods generated for extension functions will have an additional first parameter with the extension function receiver type.

    Applying it to the original question, Java compiler will see Kotlin source file with the name example.kt

    package com.test.extensions
    
    public fun MyModel.bar(): Int { /* actual code */ }
    

    as if the following Java class was declared

    package com.test.extensions
    
    class ExampleKt {
        public static int bar(MyModel receiver) { /* actual code */ }
    }
    

    As nothing happens with the extended class from the Java point of view, you can't just use dot-syntax to access such methods. But they are still callable as normal Java static methods:

    import com.test.extensions.ExampleKt;
    
    MyModel model = new MyModel();
    ExampleKt.bar(model);
    

    Static import can be used for ExampleKt class:

    import static com.test.extensions.ExampleKt.*;
    
    MyModel model = new MyModel();
    bar(model);
    
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  • 2020-11-29 21:45

    The other answers here cover the case of calling an extension function located at the top level of a Kotlin package file.

    However, my case was that I needed to call an Extension function located inside a Class. Specifically, I was dealing with an Object.

    The solution is incredibly simple.

    All you have to do is annotate your extension function as @JvmStatic, and voila! Your Java code will be able to access it and use it.

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