A kata is an exercise in martial arts. A code kata is an exercise in programming which helps hone your skills through practice and repetition. The Eclipse Collections Kata is a fun way to help you learn idiomatic Eclipse Collections usage. This particular kata is set up as a series of unit tests which fail. Your task is to make them pass, using Eclipse Collections.
- JDK 11
- Maven 3.6.1+
- IDE of your choice that has support for JDK 11
Clone this repo or simply download and extract the master zip file, then follow the instructions below for your IDE/platform.
You can import the project from "Import" => "General" => "Existing Projects into Workspace". Select "eclipse-collections-kata" directory as root directory, make sure to choose "Search for nested projects" option and finish.
Initialize IntelliJ IDEA project with the command below.
You can open the project from "File" => "Open..." => choose "eclipse-collections-kata" folder.
open as a Maven project
You can open the project directly from "File" => "Open Project..." => choose "eclipse-collections-kata" folder. In the "Open Project" dialog you might select the option "Open Required Projects" to automatically open the two modules.
There are three separate katas under different directories (Pet Kata, Company Kata, and Candy Kata).
pet-kata/src/tests
company-kata/src/tests
candy-kata/src/tests
To get started, you can refer to slides for the Instruction and Pet Kata to learn how to set-up Kata, basic features of Eclipse Collections corresponding to each Pet Kata exercise and then solutions. Check out the pet kata solutions module tests for your reference.
To learn wider range of functionalities, slides for Company Kata are now available online as well.
To learn more about the Bag data structure, take a look at the Candy Kata.
Enjoy happy learning with Eclipse Collections Kata!
The Eclipse Collections Reference Guide is a great way to get an overview of the extensive features available in the framework.
The API Design of Eclipse Collections covers the design decisions that went into making Eclipse Collections and guiding its evolution from Java 4 through Java 9. The content of the presentation is also available in a convenient to read markdown format.