Kotlin 1.2.30 is out

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We’re happy to announce the release of Kotlin 1.2.30, a new bugfix and tooling update for Kotlin 1.2. This update:

Adds a new declaration in the standard library, which imitates the suspend modifier for lambda expressions

modifier for lambda expressions Adds support for TestNG in kotlin.test

Brings support for Android modules in multiplatform projects

Introduces a new feature in kapt for reporting annotation processing errors along with proper links to the original Kotlin declarations

Adds a lot of new inspections and intentions in the IntelliJ plugin and improves its performance

Fixes bugs in the compiler and IntelliJ plugin

The update is compatible with all versions of IntelliJ IDEA from 2017.1 until 2017.3 and 2018.1 EAP, as well as with Android Studio 3.0 and Android Studio 3.1 (Beta)

We’d like to thank our external contributors whose pull requests were included in this release: Toshiaki Kameyama, Kenji Tomita, Yoshinori Isogai, Kirill Rakhman, Vsevolod Tolstopyatov, Adam McNeilly, Chris Povirk, Cuihtlauac Alvarado, Emmanuel Duchastenier, Jake Wharton, Joscha Alisch, Rodrigo B. de Oliveira, Valeriy Zhirnov.

The complete list of changes in this release can be found in the changelog.

Changes in the libraries

This release adds a new function to the Kotlin standard library with the following signature:

public inline fun <R> suspend( noinline block: suspend () -> R ): suspend () -> R = block

The purpose of this function is to wrap a function literal into a value of a suspending function type and enable its usage as a suspending function. Example:

suspend { val result = deferredResult.await() renderResult() }.startCoroutine(completion)

It’s important to note that adding this function is a preliminary step in gradually introducing a suspend modifier for lambda expressions in the future Kotlin versions. Usages of the function that would not be valid if it was a modifier, such as taking a function reference to it or using a labeled return@suspend , are prohibited, and the calls to third-party suspend -named functions that would clash with the modifier are now deprecated.

Another notable change is the support for the TestNG framework in kotlin.test – thanks to our contributor Valeriy Zhirnov! The new artifact kotlin-test-testng provides an implementation of Asserter on top of TestNG and maps the test annotations from kotlin-test-annotations-common to the TestNG test annotations.

Platform modules targeting Android

The update of the experimental multiplatform projects feature introduces support for Android platform modules. These modules should apply the corresponding plugin in the Gradle build script and can use the shared code from a common module:

apply plugin: 'com.android.application' apply plugin: 'kotlin-platform-android' // ... dependencies { expectedBy project(":multiplatform-app") // ... }

A simple project layout example can be found in the Kotlin repository: multiplatformAndroidProject

Kapt diagnostic locations

With Kotlin 1.2.30, kapt, the Kotlin annotation processing tool, can provide links to locations in the original Kotlin code rather than generated Java stubs as it reports errors encountered during annotation processing. This feature can be enabled by adding these lines to the Gradle build script ( build.gradle ):

kapt { mapDiagnosticLocations = true }

This will include the original locations in the Kotlin files into error reports from the annotation processors, for example:

e: src/main/kotlin/Foo.kt:47: error: @Provides methods must not be private

Deprecation of old kapt

Original kapt was deprecated a year ago, and in 1.2.30 we changed the deprecation warning to an error. The migration process to the new kapt (aka kapt3) is very easy, just apply a kotlin-kapt plugin in your build.gradle file:

apply plugin: "kotlin-kapt"

If you experience any troubles with the new kapt, please let us know.

IntelliJ IDEA plugin improvements

This release brings various improvements in the IntelliJ IDEA Kotlin plugin, such as performance improvements, bug fixes, and new inspections and intentions.

Intentions for converting the scoping function calls

Kotlin 1.2.30 adds new intentions that convert calls to the scoping functions let and run and into each other, as well as also into apply and vice versa:

Pasting Kotlin code into a package

The IntelliJ plugin now allows pasting Kotlin code into a package item in the Project View, creating a new Kotlin file for the code:

Other changes in the IDE plugin

Data flow analysis (‘Analyze Data Flow …’) support for mixed Kotlin and Java codebases

An option to create a run configuration for a Node CLI application from a main function in Kotlin/JS projects

function in Kotlin/JS projects Improvements in the Rename/Move refactoring, such as warnings on possible conflicts introduced by renaming

Changes in the compiler

The Kotlin 1.2.30 update fixes several known issues in the Kotlin compiler and includes performance improvements.

The compiler is now able to optimize a tail call made in a suspending function to another Unit -returning suspending function, resulting into more efficient compiled code.

How to update

To update the plugin, use Tools | Kotlin | Configure Kotlin Plugin Updates and press the “Check for updates now” button. Also, don’t forget to update the compiler and standard library version in your Maven and Gradle build scripts.

As usual, if you run into any problems with the new release, you’re welcome to ask for help on the forums, on Slack (get an invite here), or to report issues in the issue tracker.

Let’s Kotlin!