package com.example.happybirthday import android.os.Bundle import androidx.activity.ComponentActivity import androidx.activity.compose.setContent import androidx.compose.foundation.layout.fillMaxSize import androidx.compose.material3.MaterialTheme import androidx.compose.material3.Surface import androidx.compose.material3.Text import androidx.compose.runtime.Composable import androidx.compose.ui.Modifier import androidx.compose.ui.tooling.preview.Preview import com.example.happybirthday.ui.theme.HappyBirthdayTheme class MainActivity : ComponentActivity() { override fun onCreate(savedInstanceState: Bundle?) { super.onCreate(savedInstanceState) setContent { HappyBirthdayTheme { // A surface container using the 'background' color from the theme Surface(modifier = Modifier.fillMaxSize(), color = MaterialTheme.colorScheme.background) { } } } } } @Composable fun GreetingText(message: String, modifier: Modifier = Modifier) { Text( text = message ) } @Preview(showBackground = true) @Composable fun BirthdayCardPreview() { HappyBirthdayTheme { GreetingText("Happy Birthday Srinivas") } }
Write, Run & Share Kotlin code online using OneCompiler’s Kotlin online compiler for free. It’s a modern and fast online playground for Kotlin, supporting the latest version and ideal for learning, experimenting, and sharing code instantly.
Kotlin is a statically typed, modern programming language developed by JetBrains. It runs on the JVM and is fully interoperable with Java. Kotlin is concise, expressive, and safe, and it’s officially supported by Google for Android app development.
The following is a simple Kotlin program that prints a greeting:
fun main() {
println("Hello, OneCompiler!")
}
OneCompiler’s Kotlin editor supports stdin. You can provide input using the I/O tab. Here's a sample program that reads a line of input and prints a greeting:
fun main() {
print("Enter your name: ")
val name = readLine()
println("Hello, $name")
}
val name: String = "OneCompiler" // Immutable
var age: Int = 25 // Mutable
Kotlin supports type inference, so explicit types are optional:
val city = "Hyderabad"
var count = 10
val score = 85
if (score >= 50) {
println("Pass")
} else {
println("Fail")
}
for (i in 1..5) {
println(i)
}
var i = 1
while (i <= 5) {
println(i)
i++
}
var j = 1
do {
println(j)
j++
} while (j <= 5)
fun add(a: Int, b: Int): Int {
return a + b
}
fun greet(name: String) = "Hello, $name"
val items = listOf("apple", "banana", "cherry")
for (item in items) {
println(item)
}
This guide provides a quick reference to Kotlin programming syntax and features. Start coding in Kotlin using OneCompiler’s Kotlin online compiler today!