Book Image

Scala Functional Programming Patterns

By : S. Khot
Book Image

Scala Functional Programming Patterns

By: S. Khot

Overview of this book

Scala is used to construct elegant class hierarchies for maximum code reuse and extensibility and to implement their behavior using higher-order functions. Its functional programming (FP) features are a boon to help you design “easy to reason about” systems to control the growing software complexities. Knowing how and where to apply the many Scala techniques is challenging. Looking at Scala best practices in the context of what you already know helps you grasp these concepts quickly, and helps you see where and why to use them. This book begins with the rationale behind patterns to help you understand where and why each pattern is applied. You will discover what tail recursion brings to your table and will get an understanding of how to create solutions without mutations. We then explain the concept of memorization and infinite sequences for on-demand computation. Further, the book takes you through Scala’s stackable traits and dependency injection, a popular technique to produce loosely-coupled software systems. You will also explore how to currying favors to your code and how to simplify it by de-construction via pattern matching. We also show you how to do pipeline transformations using higher order functions such as the pipes and filters pattern. Then we guide you through the increasing importance of concurrent programming and the pitfalls of traditional code concurrency. Lastly, the book takes a paradigm shift to show you the different techniques that functional programming brings to your plate. This book is an invaluable source to help you understand and perform functional programming and solve common programming problems using Scala’s programming patterns.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)
12
Index

Serving the curry


Duplicated code is a major code smell. We need to apply the extract method refactoring to remove this smell. For more information, refer to https://sourcemaking.com/refactoring/extract-method.

Instead of copying and pasting, we should reuse the code. One example of such code reuse is the template method design pattern. We have a common algorithm shell. This shell has blanks, that is, unspecified behavior. The blanks are filled with a specific behavior as needed. Too formal and pedantic? Let's come back to our real-world example and look at moms and their kids.

In our example, there are moms who have different professions. There are working moms, engineer moms, doctor moms, and teacher moms. All moms love their kids. This is the common part. However, an engineer mom will fix machines, design algorithms, and build houses. On the other hand, a doctor mom will perform surgeries, prescribe medicines to the patients, and take care of newborn babies. A teacher mom will teach children...