Update: Anyone (like OP) who just needs a so-called "Singleton", sometimes called "Service" (except in Android), should simply use Kotlin's built-in:
object Foo {
// Done, this already does what OP needed,
// because the boilerplate codes (like static field and constructor),
// are taken care of by Kotlin.
}
(Like Roman rightly pointed out in the comment-section.)
Previous answer; If you have (or plan to have) multiple static
variables, then continue reading:
The closest thing to Java's static fields is a companion object. You can find the documentation reference for them here: https://kotlinlang.org/docs/reference/object-declarations.html#companion-objects
Your code in Kotlin would look something like this:
class Foo {
companion object {
private lateinit var instance: Foo
fun get(): Foo {
return instance;
}
}
init {
if (instance == null) {
instance = this
}
}
}
If you want your fields/methods to be exposed as static to Java callers, you can apply the @JvmStatic
annotation:
class Foo {
companion object {
private lateinit var instance: Foo
@JvmStatic fun get(): Foo {
return instance;
}
}
init {
if (instance == null) {
instance = this
}
}
}
Note that @JvmStatic
does not need any import (as it's built-in feature of Kotlin).