Sequence Basics in Kotlin
On this page (12sections)
Introduction
Sequence Basics is a fundamental concept every Kotlin developer should understand. Sequences evaluate lazily, computing each element only when needed. They shine on large datasets or chained transformations where eager lists would waste memory.
Sequence processes elements lazily one at a time. In this tutorial you will learn the syntax, walk through a complete example program, study the sample output, and review best practices so you can apply the concept confidently in your own projects.
Definition
- Sequence processes elements lazily one at a time.
- Created using sequenceOf or asSequence().
- Useful for large or infinite data streams.
Syntax
val seq = sequenceOf(1, 2, 3)
Sequence Basics in Kotlin Example Program in Kotlin
fun main(args: Array<String>) {
val seq = sequenceOf(1, 2, 3, 4)
val result = seq.filter { it % 2 == 0 }.toList()
println(result)
}
Sample Output
[2, 4]
When to use
Use sequences when processing long chains of transformations on large collections and you want lazy evaluation.
How it works
-
The program starts with a
mainfunction — the entry point that runs when you execute the file. -
val seq = sequenceOf(1, 2, 3, 4)assigns or updates a value used later in the program. -
The
println(result)statement writes a line to the console — this produces part of the sample output below. -
Sequence processes elements lazily one at a time.
-
Run the program in IntelliJ IDEA, Android Studio, or with the Kotlin command-line compiler (
kotlinc/kotlin). Compare your console output with the sample output shown below.
Best Practices
- Understand the core idea: sequence processes elements lazily one at a time.
- Prefer readable names and small functions so examples map directly to real projects.
- Run and modify the example — change values and observe how the output changes.
Common Mistakes
- Skipping the example and only reading the definition — hands-on practice cements the concept.
- Copying syntax without understanding nullable vs non-nullable types or scope rules.
- Ignoring compiler warnings that often point to safer alternatives.
Key Points
- Sequence processes elements lazily one at a time.
- Created using sequenceOf or asSequence().
- Useful for large or infinite data streams.
- Test the example locally and verify the output matches the sample.
- Experiment by changing input values to see how behaviour changes.
Notes
- Semicolons at the end of statements are optional in Kotlin.