Book Image

Scala Design Patterns

By : Ivan Nikolov
Book Image

Scala Design Patterns

By: Ivan Nikolov

Overview of this book

Scala has become increasingly popular in many different IT sectors. The language is exceptionally feature-rich which helps developers write less code and get faster results. Design patterns make developer’s lives easier by helping them write great software that is easy to maintain, runs efficiently and is valuable to the company or people concerned. You will learn about the various features of Scala and be able to apply well-known, industry-proven design patterns in your work. The book starts off by focusing on some of the most interesting features of Scala while using practical real-world examples. We will also cover the popular "Gang of Four" design patterns and show you how to incorporate functional patterns effectively. By the end of this book, you will have enough knowledge and understanding to quickly assess problems and come up with elegant solutions.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
Scala Design Patterns
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgments
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Lazy evaluation


Writing efficient code is an important part of software engineering. A lot of times we will see cases where an expression is expensive to evaluate due to different possible reasons—database access, complex calculations, and so on. There are cases where we might even be able to exit the application without even evaluating these expensive expressions. This is where lazy evaluation becomes helpful.

Note

Lazy evaluation makes sure that an expression is evaluated only once when it is actually needed.

Scala supports lazy evaluation in a couple of flavors: lazy variables and by name parameters. We have already seen both in this book. The former we saw when we looked at creational design patterns in Chapter 6, Creational Design Patterns, and more specifically, lazy initialization. We saw the latter at a few places, but we encountered it for the first time in Chapter 8, Behavioral Design Patterns – Part 1, where we showed how to implement the command design pattern in a way that is...