Book Image

Learning Scala Programming

By : Vikash Sharma
Book Image

Learning Scala Programming

By: Vikash Sharma

Overview of this book

Scala is a general-purpose programming language that supports both functional and object-oriented programming paradigms. Due to its concise design and versatility, Scala's applications have been extended to a wide variety of fields such as data science and cluster computing. You will learn to write highly scalable, concurrent, and testable programs to meet everyday software requirements. We will begin by understanding the language basics, syntax, core data types, literals, variables, and more. From here you will be introduced to data structures with Scala and you will learn to work with higher-order functions. Scala's powerful collections framework will help you get the best out of immutable data structures and utilize them effectively. You will then be introduced to concepts such as pattern matching, case classes, and functional programming features. From here, you will learn to work with Scala's object-oriented features. Going forward, you will learn about asynchronous and reactive programming with Scala, where you will be introduced to the Akka framework. Finally, you will learn the interoperability of Scala and Java. After reading this book, you'll be well versed with this language and its features, and you will be able to write scalable, concurrent, and reactive programs in Scala.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
Title Page
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
Index

Using the Option way


Let's try and change the function signature in a way that we can reason about and modify it so that it does what it says:

def toInt(str: String): Option[Int] = Try(str.toInt) match { 
  case Success(value) => Some(value) 
  case Failure(_) => None 
}

In the preceding definition, we knew that the response was optional. We might or might not get a corresponding integer value for every string we pass to our function. Hence, we made the response type an Option[Int]. Also, as you may have noticed, we used another construct available to us from the scala.util package, named Try. How do we use Try? We pass a function for its evaluation to the Try block's constructor/apply method. As might be obvious, the Try block's apply method takes a function as a by-name parameter, which tries to evaluate that function. Based on the result or exception, it responds as a Success(value) or Failure(exception).

We used the Try  construct and passed logic as an argument. On success, we responded...