Kotlin Tutorial

Welcome to the very first chapter of our complete Kotlin tutorial series — just like we promised, taught in the same detailed, patient, human-teacher style as a good classroom session.

Today we’re going to answer the most important questions before writing even a single line of code:

  • What is Kotlin really?
  • Where did it come from?
  • Why should I learn it in 2025/2026?
  • How is it better (or different) than Java, Scala, Python, etc.?
  • What can I actually build with Kotlin?
  • How do I set up my computer so I can start coding right away?

Let’s begin!

1. What is Kotlin? (In simple human words)

Kotlin is a modern, concise, safe, and extremely fun-to-write programming language created by JetBrains (the same company that makes IntelliJ IDEA, PyCharm, WebStorm, etc.).

Officially: Kotlin is a statically-typed programming language that runs on the Java Virtual Machine (JVM) and can also be compiled to JavaScript, native binaries (via Kotlin/Native), and even WebAssembly.

But in human language: Kotlin is Java, but much nicer to write. It removes almost all the boring and annoying parts of Java while keeping 100% compatibility with every Java library ever written.

You can use Spring Boot, Hibernate, OkHttp, Retrofit, Gson, JUnit, Android SDK… literally everything that works in Java — works in Kotlin too. And usually with much less code.

2. Brief History of Kotlin

Year Milestone
2010 JetBrains starts a secret internal project called “Kotlin”
2011 First public announcement at the JVM Language Summit
Feb 2016 Kotlin 1.0 released — considered production-ready
2017 Google announces official support for Kotlin on Android (huge moment!)
2019 Kotlin becomes Google’s preferred language for Android development
2021 Kotlin 1.5 → inline classes, unsigned integers, new JVM IR backend
2023 Kotlin 1.8 / 1.9 → huge improvements in multiplatform & compiler
2024 Kotlin 2.0 released — new K2 compiler (much faster), context receivers, better multiplatform support
2025 Kotlin continues to grow extremely fast — now used by Netflix, Airbnb, Pinterest, Square, Trello, Autodesk, Coursera, Atlassian…

3. Why Kotlin? (Compared to Java, Scala, etc.)

Feature / Aspect Java (classic) Kotlin Scala Python / JavaScript
Null Safety No (NullPointerException hell) Built-in (game changer!) Optional (but not as nice) No (but dynamic)
Code verbosity Very high Very low (50–70% less code) Medium–high Very low
Java interop Perfect (100%) Good but not perfect Poor
Performance Excellent Same as Java Same as Java Much slower
Learning curve Medium Easy if you know Java Steep Very easy
Modern features Slow to adopt Lambdas, extensions, coroutines, DSLs… Many (but complex) Many (dynamic)
Android support Official but painful First-class citizen Not really Not possible
Multiplatform (mobile, web, desktop, server, native) Only JVM Excellent (KMP) Limited Limited

Bottom line: Kotlin gives you:

  • All the power and ecosystem of Java
  • Much less boilerplate
  • Much better safety (null safety, immutability by default)
  • Modern language features without the complexity of Scala
  • The best developer experience on the JVM today

4. Real-World Use Cases of Kotlin (2025–2026)

Domain Popular Frameworks / Tools Companies / Apps using Kotlin heavily
Android Jetpack Compose, Kotlin Coroutines, Koin/Dagger-Hilt, Retrofit, Room, Navigation Compose Google, Airbnb, Pinterest, Trello, Evernote, Square, Duolingo, Netflix
Backend / Server Spring Boot 3, Ktor, Micronaut, Quarkus, Exposed, Ktorm Netflix, Pinterest, Atlassian, Autodesk, JetBrains, Coursera
Kotlin Multiplatform (KMP) Shared business logic + UI (Compose Multiplatform) Netflix (mobile + TV), Autodesk, Cash App, McDonald’s, 9GAG
Desktop Jetpack Compose for Desktop, TornadoFX JetBrains (IntelliJ plugins), some internal tools
Scripting .kts files, Gradle build scripts Almost all modern Gradle projects
Data Science / Notebooks Kotlin Dataframe, Kotlin for Jupyter Growing fast in data teams
Game Development LibGDX (Kotlin-first now) Many indie games

5. Setting Up Your Kotlin Environment (Step-by-Step)

You have three main ways to start writing Kotlin today — I recommend starting with Option 1 or Option 2.

Option 1: IntelliJ IDEA (Recommended – Best Experience)

  1. Download IntelliJ IDEA Community Edition (completely free) → https://www.jetbrains.com/idea/download/
  2. Install JDK 17 or 21 (LTS versions – highly recommended)
    • Easiest: Let IntelliJ download it for you during project creation
    • Or manually: https://adoptium.net/ (Eclipse Temurin) or https://www.oracle.com/java/technologies/downloads/
  3. Create your first Kotlin project
    • Open IntelliJ IDEA
    • Click New Project
    • Select KotlinJVM | IDEA
    • Give it a name (e.g., KotlinPlayground)
    • Choose JDK 17 or 21
    • Click Create
  4. Write your first program (we’ll do this in Chapter 2)

Option 2: Kotlin Playground (Zero Installation – Online)

→ https://play.kotlinlang.org

  • Just open the link in your browser
  • You can write, run, and share Kotlin code instantly
  • Perfect for learning Chapters 1–15
  • (Later you’ll want a local IDE for bigger projects)

Option 3: Command-Line Only (For Terminal Lovers)

  1. Install JDK 17/21
  2. Download Kotlin compiler: https://kotlinlang.org/docs/command-line.html or via SDKMAN! (recommended for Mac/Linux):
Bash
  1. Create a file Hello.kt
Kotlin
  1. Compile & run:
Bash

or simply:

Bash

Summary – Why You Should Be Excited About Kotlin

  • Null safety → goodbye NullPointerException
  • Concise & beautiful code
  • Full Java compatibility → huge ecosystem
  • Coroutines → easy asynchronous programming
  • Multiplatform → write once, run on Android, iOS, Desktop, Web, Server…
  • JetBrains backing → best tooling in the world (IntelliJ IDEA)