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author | Adam Bard <github@adambard.com> | 2013-08-02 09:29:39 -0700 |
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committer | Adam Bard <github@adambard.com> | 2013-08-02 09:29:39 -0700 |
commit | 9bf250c77ff58a868e682fea2f56006f9254df07 (patch) | |
tree | 5948fc3935f8f62dbb725f045fa273475b49d869 | |
parent | 3baf491ea66ddc77fb949c7aa5e988c318e372c0 (diff) | |
parent | 0e8654e40efe9100100cb6ff15e8fd7d709a7116 (diff) |
Merge pull request #149 from petrovg/adding_scala
Adding Scala
-rw-r--r-- | scala.html.markdown | 395 |
1 files changed, 395 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/scala.html.markdown b/scala.html.markdown new file mode 100644 index 00000000..8e00f135 --- /dev/null +++ b/scala.html.markdown @@ -0,0 +1,395 @@ +--- +language: Scala +contributors: + - ["George Petrov", "http://github.com/petrovg"] + - ["Dominic Bou-Samra, "http://dbousamra.github.com"] +filename: learn.scala +--- + +Scala - the scalable language + +```c + + + +/* + Set yourself up: + + 1) Download Scala - http://www.scala-lang.org/downloads + 2) unzip/untar in your favourite location and put the bin subdir on the path + 3) Start a scala REPL by typing scala. You should see the prompt: + + scala> + + This is the so called REPL. You can run commands in the REPL. Let's do just that: +*/ + +println(10) // prints the integer 10 + +println("Boo!") // printlns the string Boo! + + +// Some basics + +// Printing, and forcing a new line on the next print +println("Hello world!") +// Printing, without forcing a new line on next print +print("Hello world") + +// Declaring values is done using either var or val +// val declarations are immutable, whereas var's are mutable. Immutablility is a good thing. +val x = 10 // x is now 10 +x = 20 // error: reassignment to val +var x = 10 +x = 20 // x is now 20 + +// Single line comments start with two forward slashes +/* +Multi line comments look like this. +*/ + +// Boolean values +true +false + +// Boolean operations +!true // false +!false // true +true == false // false +10 > 5 // true + +// Math is as per usual +1 + 1 // 2 +2 - 1 // 1 +5 * 3 // 15 +6 / 2 // 3 + + +// Evaluating a command in the REPL gives you the type and value of the result + +1 + 7 + +/* The above line results in: + + scala> 1 + 7 + res29: Int = 8 + + This means the result of evaluating 1 + 7 is an object of type Int with a value of 8 + + 1+7 will give you the same result +*/ + + +// Everything is an object, including a function. Type these in the REPL: + +7 // results in res30: Int = 7 (res30 is just a generated var name for the result) + +// The next line gives you a function that takes an Int and returns it squared +(x:Int) => x * x + +// You can assign this function to an identifier, like this: +val sq = (x:Int) => x * x + +/* The above says this + + sq: Int => Int = <function1> + + Which means that this time we gave an explicit name to the value - sq is a function that take an Int and returns Int. + + sq can be executed as follows: +*/ + +sq(10) // Gives you this: res33: Int = 100. The result is the Int with a value 100 + +// Scala allows methods and functions to return, or take as parameters, other functions or methods. + +val add10: Int => Int = _ + 10 // A function taking an Int and returning an Int +List(1, 2, 3) map add10 // List(11, 12, 13) - add10 is applied to each element + +// Anonymous functions can be used instead of named functions: +List(1, 2, 3) map (x => x + 10) + +// And the underscore symbol, can be used if there is just one argument to the anonymous function. It gets bound as the variable +List(1, 2, 3) map (_ + 10) + +TODO // If the anonymous block AND the function you are applying both take one argument, you can even omit the underscore +List("Dom", "Bob", "Natalia") foreach println + + + +// Data structures + +val a = Array(1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13) +a(0) +a(3) +a(21) // Throws an exception + +val m = Map("fork" -> "tenedor", "spoon" -> "cuchara", "knife" -> "cuchillo") +m("fork") +m("spoon") +m("bottle") // Throws an exception + +val safeM = m.withDefaultValue("no lo se") +safeM("bottle") + +val s = Set(1, 3, 7) +s(0) +s(1) + +/* Look up the documentation of map here - http://www.scala-lang.org/api/current/index.html#scala.collection.immutable.Map + * and make sure you can read it + */ + + +// Tuples + +(1, 2) + +(4, 3, 2) + +(1, 2, "three") + +(a, 2, "three") + +// Why have this? +val divideInts = (x:Int, y:Int) => (x / y, x % y) + +divideInts(10,3) // The function divideInts gives you the result and the remainder + +// To access the elements of a tuple, use _._n where n is the 1-based index of the element +val d = divideInts(10,3) + +d._1 + +d._2 + + + +// Combinators + +s.map(sq) + +val sSquared = s. map(sq) + +sSquared.filter(_ < 10) + +sSquared.reduce (_+_) + +// The filter function takes a predicate (a function from A -> Boolean) and selects all elements which satisfy the predicate +List(1, 2, 3) filter (_ > 2) // List(3) +List( + Person(name = "Dom", age = 23), + Person(name = "Bob", age = 30) +).filter(_.age > 25) // List(Person("Bob", 30)) + + +// Scala a foreach method defined on certain collections that takes a type returning Unit (a void method) +aListOfNumbers foreach (x => println(x)) +aListOfNumbers foreach println + + + + +// For comprehensions + +for { n <- s } yield sq(n) + +val nSquared2 = for { n <- s } yield sq(n) + +for { n <- nSquared2 if n < 10 } yield n + +for { n <- s; nSquared = n * n if nSquared < 10} yield nSquared + +/* NB Those were not for loops. The semantics of a for loop is 'repeat', whereas a for-comprehension + defines a relationship between two sets of data. Research this further */ + + + +// Loops and iteration + +1 to 5 +val r = 1 to 5 +r.foreach( println ) + +r foreach println +// NB: Scala is quite lenien when it comes to dots and brackets - study the rules separately. This +// helps write DSLs and APIs that read like English + +(5 to 1 by -1) foreach ( println ) + +// A while loops +var i = 0 +while (i < 10) { println("i " + i); i+=1 } + +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 comprehensions above is easier to understand + // and parallelize + +// A do while loop +do { + println("x is still less then 10"); + x += 1 +} while (x < 10) + +// Tail recursion is an idiomatic way of doing recurring things in Scala. Recursive functions need an +// explicit return type, the compiler can't infer it. Here it's Unit. +def showNumbersInRange(a:Int, b:Int):Unit = { print(a); if (a < b) showNumbersInRange(a+1, b) } + + + +// Conditionals + +val x = 10 + +if (x == 1) println("yeah") +if (x == 10) println("yeah") +if (x == 11) println("yeah") +if (x == 11) println ("yeah") else println("nay") + +println(if (x == 10) "yeah" else "nope") +val text = if (x == 10) "yeah" else "nope" + +var i = 0 +while (i < 10) { println("i " + i); i+=1 } + + + +// Object oriented features + +// Classname is Dog +class Dog { + //A method called bark, returning a String + def bark: String = { + // the body of the method + "Woof, woof!" + } +} + +// Classes can contain nearly any other construct, including other classes, functions, methods, objects, case classes, traits etc. + + + +// Case classes + +case class Person(name:String, phoneNumber:String) + +Person("George", "1234") == Person("Kate", "1236") + + + + +// Pattern matching + +val me = Person("George", "1234") + +me match { case Person(name, number) => "We matched someone : " + name + ", phone : " + number } + +me match { case Person(name, number) => "Match : " + name; case _ => "Hm..." } + +me match { case Person("George", number) => "Match"; case _ => "Hm..." } + +me match { case Person("Kate", number) => "Match"; case _ => "Hm..." } + +me match { case Person("Kate", _) => "Girl"; case Person("George", _) => "Boy" } + +val kate = Person("Kate", "1234") + +kate match { case Person("Kate", _) => "Girl"; case Person("George", _) => "Boy" } + + + +// Regular expressions + +val email = "(.*)@(.*)".r // The suffix .r invokes method r on String, which makes it a Regex + +val email(user, domain) = "henry@zkpr.com" + +"mrbean@pyahoo.com" match { + case email(name, domain) => "I know your name, " + name +} + + + +// Strings + +"Scala strings are surrounded by double quotes" // +'a' // A Scala Char +'Single quote strings don't exist' // Error +"Strings have the usual Java methods defined on them".length +"They also have some extra Scala methods.".reverse // See scala.collection.immutable.StringOps + +println("ABCDEF".length) +println("ABCDEF".substring(2, 6)) +println("ABCDEF".replace("C", "3")) + +val n = 45 +println(s"We have $n apples") + +val a = Array(11, 9, 6) +println(s"My second daughter is ${a(2-1)} years old") + +// Some characters need to be 'escaped', e.g. a double quote inside a string: +val a = "They stood outside the \"Rose and Crown\"" + +// Triple double-quotes allow for strings to span multiple rows and contain funny characters +val html = """<form id="daform"> + <p>Press belo', Joe</p> + | <input type="submit"> + </form>""" + + + +// Application structure and organization + +// Importing things +import scala.collection.immutable.List + +// Import all "sub packages" +import scala.collection.immutable._ + +// Import multiple classes in one statement +import scala.collection.immutable.{List, Map} + +// Rename an import using '=>' +import scala.collection.immutable{ List => ImmutableList } + +// Import all classes, except some. The following excludes Map and Set: +import scala.collection.immutable.{Map => _, Set => _, _} + +// Your programs entry point is defined in an scala file using an object, with a single method, main: +object Application { + def main(args: Array[String]): Unit = { + // stuff goes here. + } +} + +// Files can contain multiple classes and objects. Compile with scalac + + + + +// Input and output + +// To read a file line by line +import scala.io.Source +for(line <- Source.fromPath("myfile.txt").getLines()) + println(line) + +// To write a file use Java's PrintWriter + + +``` + +## Further resources + +[Scala for the impatient](http://horstmann.com/scala/) + +[Twitter Scala school(http://twitter.github.io/scala_school/) + +[The scala documentation] + +Join the [Scala user group](https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/scala-user) + |