diff options
| author | Levi Bostian <levi.bostian@gmail.com> | 2014-11-17 19:42:20 -0600 | 
|---|---|---|
| committer | Levi Bostian <levi.bostian@gmail.com> | 2014-11-17 19:42:20 -0600 | 
| commit | 5ec6d68989ef83222051a81fa93b0951859aba92 (patch) | |
| tree | 815cfba20cdd6c425860ed99cc2817d2470c281e | |
| parent | 0bd67da8631269cd7ba694775845c53b5d3e6964 (diff) | |
| parent | 651e1e90d2da18ee0dd225ef78631c90d519af9d (diff) | |
Merge pull request #864 from geoffliu/master
[Scala/en] Some work on the Scala page
| -rw-r--r-- | scala.html.markdown | 152 | 
1 files changed, 118 insertions, 34 deletions
| diff --git a/scala.html.markdown b/scala.html.markdown index dc039f0c..529347be 100644 --- a/scala.html.markdown +++ b/scala.html.markdown @@ -54,14 +54,17 @@ var y = 10  y = 20  // y is now 20  /* -  Scala is a statically typed language, yet note that in the above declarations, we did not specify -  a type. This is due to a language feature called type inference. In most cases, Scala compiler can -  guess what the type of a variable is, so you don't have to type it every time. We can explicitly -  declare the type of a variable like so: +  Scala is a statically typed language, yet note that in the above declarations, +  we did not specify a type. This is due to a language feature called type +  inference. In most cases, Scala compiler can guess what the type of a variable +  is, so you don't have to type it every time. We can explicitly declare the +  type of a variable like so:  */  val z: Int = 10  val a: Double = 1.0 -val b: Double = 10  // Notice automatic conversion from Int to Double, result is 10.0, not 10 + +// Notice automatic conversion from Int to Double, result is 10.0, not 10 +val b: Double = 10  // Boolean values  true @@ -94,8 +97,8 @@ true == false // false    This means the result of evaluating 1 + 7 is an object of type Int with a    value of 8 -  Note that "res29" is a sequentially generated variable name to store the results of the -  expressions you typed, your output may differ. +  Note that "res29" is a sequentially generated variable name to store the +  results of the expressions you typed, your output may differ.  */  "Scala strings are surrounded by double quotes" @@ -142,27 +145,69 @@ val html = """<form id="daform">  // 2. Functions  ///////////////////////////////////////////////// -// The next line gives you a function that takes an Int and returns it squared -(x:Int) => x * x +// Functions are defined like so: +// +//   def functionName(args...): ReturnType = { body... } +// +// If you come from more traditional languages, notice the omission of the +// return keyword. In Scala, the last expression in the function block is the +// return value. +def sumOfSquares(x: Int, y: Int): Int = { +  val x2 = x * x +  val y2 = y * y +  x2 + y2 +} -// You can assign this function to an identifier, like this: -val sq = (x:Int) => x * x +// The { } can be omitted if the function body is a single expression: +def sumOfSquaresShort(x: Int, y: Int): Int = x * x + y * y -/* The above says this +// Syntax for calling functions is familiar: +sumOfSquares(3, 4)  // => 25 -   sq: Int => Int = <function1> +// In most cases (with recursive functions the most notable exception), function +// return type can be omitted, and the same type inference we saw with variables +// will work with function return values: +def sq(x: Int) = x * x  // Compiler can guess return type is Int -   Which means that this time we gave an explicit name to the value - sq is a -   function that take an Int and returns Int. +// Functions can have default parameters: +def addWithDefault(x: Int, y: Int = 5) = x + y +addWithDefault(1, 2)  // => 3 +addWithDefault(1)  // => 6 -   sq can be executed as follows: -*/ -sq(10)   // Gives you this: res33: Int = 100. +// Anonymous functions look like this: +(x:Int) => x * x -// The colon explicitly defines the type of a value, in this case a function -// taking an Int and returning an Int. -val add10: Int => Int = _ + 10 +// Unlike defs, even the input type of anonymous functions can be omitted if the +// context makes it clear. Notice the type "Int => Int" which means a function +// that takes Int and returns Int. +val sq: Int => Int = x => x * x + +// Anonymous functions can be called as usual: +sq(10)   // => 100 + +// If your anonymous function has one or two arguments, and each argument is +// used only once, Scala gives you an even shorter way to define them. These +// anonymous functions turn out to be extremely common, as will be obvious in +// the data structure section. +val addOne: Int => Int = _ + 1 +val weirdSum: (Int, Int) => Int = (_ * 2 + _ * 3) + +addOne(5)  // => 6 +weirdSum(2, 4)  // => 16 + + +// The return keyword exists in Scala, but it only returns from the inner-most +// def that surrounds it. It has no effect on anonymous functions. For example: +def foo(x: Int) = { +  val anonFunc: Int => Int = { z => +    if (z > 5) +      return z  // This line makes z the return value of foo! +    else +      z + 2  // This line is the return value of anonFunc +  } +  anonFunc(x)  // This line is the return value of foo +}  ///////////////////////////////////////////////// @@ -187,7 +232,7 @@ while (i < 10) {  println("i " + i); i+=1  }   // Yes, again. What happened? Why  i    // Show the value of i. Note that while is a loop in the classical sense -       // it executes sequentially while changing the loop variable. while is very -     // fast, faster that Java // loops, but using the combinators and +     // fast, faster that Java loops, but using the combinators and       // comprehensions above is easier to understand and parallelize  // A do while loop @@ -290,13 +335,24 @@ d._2    And now we will explain what these are.  */ +// classes are similar to classes in other languages. Constructor arguments are +// declared after the class name, and initialization is done in the class body.  class Dog(br: String) { +  // Constructor code here    var breed: String = br -  //A method called bark, returning a String -  def bark: String = { -    // the body of the method -    "Woof, woof!" -  } + +  // Define a method called bark, returning a String +  def bark = "Woof, woof!" + +  // Values and methods are assumed public. "protected" and "private" keywords +  // are also available. +  private def sleep(hours: Int) = +    println(s"I'm sleeping for $hours hours") + +  // Abstract methods are simply methods with no body. If we uncomment the next +  // line, class Dog would need to be declared abstract +  //   abstract class Dog(...) { ... } +  // def chaseAfter(what: String): String  }  val mydog = new Dog("greyhound") @@ -304,17 +360,45 @@ println(mydog.breed) // => "greyhound"  println(mydog.bark) // => "Woof, woof!" -// Classes can contain nearly any other construct, including other classes, -// functions, methods, objects, case classes, traits etc. +// The "object" keyword creates a type AND a singleton instance of it. It is +// common for Scala classes to have a "companion object", where the per-instance +// behavior is captured in the classes themselves, but behavior related to all +// instance of that class go in objects. The difference is similar to class +// methods vs static methods in other languages. Note that objects and classes +// can have the same name. +object Dog { +  def allKnownBreeds = List("pitbull", "shepherd", "retriever") +  def createDog(breed: String) = new Dog(breed) +} -// Case classes -case class Person(name:String, phoneNumber:String) +// Case classes are classes that have extra functionality built in. A common +// question for Scala beginners is when to use classes and when to use case +// classes. The line is quite fuzzy, but in general, classes tend to focus on +// encapsulation, polymorphism, and behavior. The values in these classes tend +// to be private, and only methods are exposed. The primary purpose of case +// classes is to hold immutable data. They often have few methods, and the +// methods rarely have side-effects. +case class Person(name: String, phoneNumber: String) + +// Create a new instance. Note cases classes don't need "new" +val george = Person("George", "1234") +val kate = Person("Kate", "4567") + +// With case classes, you get a few perks for free, like getters: +george.phoneNumber  // => "1234" + +// Per field equality (no need to override .equals) +Person("George", "1234") == Person("Kate", "1236")  // => false + +// Easy way to copy +// otherGeorge == Person("george", "9876") +val otherGeorge = george.copy(phoneNumber = "9876") -Person("George", "1234") == Person("Kate", "1236") +// And many others. Case classes also get pattern matching for free, see below. -// Objects and traits coming soon! +// Traits coming soon!  ///////////////////////////////////////////////// @@ -423,7 +507,7 @@ for { n <- s; nSquared = n * n if nSquared < 10} yield nSquared  // 8. Implicits  ///////////////////////////////////////////////// -Coming soon! +// Coming soon!  ///////////////////////////////////////////////// | 
