Delegation
The Delegation pattern has proven to be a good alternative to implementation inheritance, and Kotlin supports it natively requiring zero boilerplate code.
A class Derived can implement an interface Base by delegating all of its public members to a specified object:
The by-clause in the supertype list for Derived indicates that b will be stored internally in objects of Derived and the compiler will generate all the methods of Base that forward to b.
Overriding a member of an interface implemented by delegation
Overrides work as you expect: the compiler will use your override implementations instead of those in the delegate object. If you want to add override fun printMessage() { print("abc") } to Derived, the program would print abc instead of 10 when printMessage is called:
Note, however, that members overridden in this way do not get called from the members of the delegate object, which can only access its own implementations of the interface members:
Learn more about delegated properties.