Generic Receivers — continued

A continuation of generic receivers, with a demonstration of using extensions, operators and delegates to implement a functional version of List<T>, and why that might not be a great idea.

Gabriel Shanahan
The Kotlin Primer

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THE CURRENT VERSION OF THIS ARTICLE IS PUBLISHED HERE.

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Tags: #KOTLIN FEATURE

This article is part of the Kotlin Primer, an opinionated guide to the Kotlin language, which is indented to help facilitate Kotlin adoption inside Java-centric organizations. It was originally written as an organizational learning resource for Etnetera a.s. and I would like to express my sincere gratitude for their support.

It is recommended to read the Introduction before moving on. Check out the Table of Contents for all articles.

In the last article, we talked about defining extensions on generic type parameters, such as T. However, you can also define extensions on generic types, such as List<T>:

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