Discover main parts of your multiplatform project:
When you create a multiplatform project, the Project Wizard automatically applies the kotlin-multiplatform
Gradle plugin in the file build.gradle
(.kts
).
You can also apply it manually.
The
kotlin-multiplatform
plugin works with Gradle 6.0 or later.
plugins { id 'org.jetbrains.kotlin.multiplatform' version '1.4.10' }
plugins { kotlin("multiplatform") version "1.4.10" }
The kotlin-multiplatform
plugin configures the project for creating an application or library to work on multiple platforms and prepares it for building on these platforms.
In the file build.gradle
(.kts
), it creates the kotlin
extension at the top level, which includes configuration for targets, source sets, and dependencies.
A multiplatform project is aimed at multiple platforms that are represented by different targets. A target is part of the build that is responsible for building, testing, and packaging the application for a specific platform, such as macOS, iOS, or Android. See the list of supported platforms.
When you create a multiplatform project, targets are added to the kotlin
block in the file build.gradle
(build.gradle.kts
).
kotlin { jvm() js { browser {} } }
Learn how to set up targets manually.
The project includes the directory src
with Kotlin source sets, which are collections of Kotlin code files, along with their resources, dependencies, and language settings. A source set can be used in Kotlin compilations for one or more target platforms.
Each source set directory includes Kotlin code files (the kotlin
directory) and resources
. The Project Wizard creates default source sets for the main
and test
compilations of the common code and all added targets.
Source set names are case sensitive.
Source sets are added to the sourceSets
block of the top-level kotlin
block.
kotlin { sourceSets { commonMain { /* ... */} commonTest { /* ... */} jvmMain { /* ... */} jvmTest { /* ... */ } jsMain { /* ... */} jsTest { /* ... */} } }
kotlin { sourceSets { val commonMain by getting { /* ... */ } val commonTest by getting { /* ... */ } val jvmMain by getting { /* ... */ } val jvmTest by getting { /* ... */ } val jsMain by getting { /* ... */ } val jsTest by getting { /* ... */ } } }
Source sets form a hierarchy, which is used for sharing the common code. In a source set shared among several targets, you can use the platform-specific language features and dependencies that are available for all these targets.
For example, all Kotlin/Native features are available in the desktopMain
source set, which targets the Linux (linuxX64
), Windows (mingwX64
), and macOS (macosX64
) platforms.
Learn how to build the hierarchy of source sets.
Each target can have one or more compilations, for example, for production and test purposes.
For each target, default compilations include:
main
and test
compilations for JVM, JS, and Native targets.Each compilation has a default source set, which contains sources and dependencies specific to that compilation.
Learn how to configure compilations.
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Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0.
https://kotlinlang.org/docs/reference/mpp-discover-project.html