This chapter presented some powerful abstractions for asynchronous programming. We have seen how to encode latency with the Future
type, how to avoid blocking with callbacks on futures, and how to compose values from multiple futures. We have learned that futures and promises are closely tied together and that promises allow interfacing with legacy callback-based systems. In cases, where blocking was unavoidable, we learned how to use the Await
object and the blocking
statement. Finally, we learned that the Scala Async library is a powerful alternative for expressing future computations more concisely.
Futures and promises only allow dealing with a single value at a time. What if an asynchronous computation produces more than a single value before completing? Similarly, how do we efficiently execute thousands of asynchronous operations on different elements of large datasets? Should we use futures in such cases? In the next chapter, we will explore Scala's support for data-parallelism...