How the Android engineering team at Udacity has embraced learning Kotlin through experimentation and making “mistakes”
https://engineering.udacity.com/learning-kotlin-by-mistake-b99304b7d724
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I love to talk Android, tech, or geekery, so if you have feedback or want to chat you can follow me on Twitter, here on dev.to, or check out my blog.
Hi, Nate! Nice to meet you. Since you work both on Android and Udacity and say you like to chat about Android, I thought you could give me a hand with a confussion I have :(.
I'm in the middle of Udacity's Android Basics Nanodegree and plan on then enrolling in the Android Developer Nanodegree. I see that it doesn't include anything on Android Jetpack as of yet, and I'm worried that its contents could be out of date or not reflecting current development techniques, making me learn things that I won't actually use in today's developing procceses or that I'll have to quickly forget and substitute with something else.
I ask this because I don't really understand what this Jetpack thing is, I've just vaguely read about it. I don't get how much it affects current Android development.
I really have completely loved Udacity so far and would love to keep studying there! I just want to make sure that the ADND is still a great choice. I also understand that I could complement the nanodegree with other material related to Android Jetpack, if I actually need to. (I don't really know if I do).
Thanks!