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

Other factory design patterns


There are some different variations of the factory design patterns. In all cases, though, the purpose is generally the same—hide creation complexity. In the next subsections, we will briefly mention two of the other factory design patterns: static factory and simple factory.

The static factory

The static factory could be represented as a static method, which is a part of the base class. It is called to create concrete instances, which extend the base class. One of the biggest drawbacks here, however, is that if another extension of the base class is added, the base class (because of the static method) also has to be edited. Let's show a simple example from the world of the animals:

trait Animal
class Bird extends Animal
class Mammal extends Animal
class Fish extends Animal

object Animal {
  def apply(animal: String): Animal = animal.toLowerCase match {
    case "bird" => new Bird
    case "mammal" => new Mammal
    case "fish" => new Fish
    case x:...