Book Image

Learn Scala Programming

By : Slava Schmidt
Book Image

Learn Scala Programming

By: Slava Schmidt

Overview of this book

The second version of Scala has undergone multiple changes to support features and library implementations. Scala 2.13, with its main focus on modularizing the standard library and simplifying collections, brings with it a host of updates. Learn Scala Programming addresses both technical and architectural changes to the redesigned standard library and collections, along with covering in-depth type systems and first-level support for functions. You will discover how to leverage implicits as a primary mechanism for building type classes and look at different ways to test Scala code. You will also learn about abstract building blocks used in functional programming, giving you sufficient understanding to pick and use any existing functional programming library out there. In the concluding chapters, you will explore reactive programming by covering the Akka framework and reactive streams. By the end of this book, you will have built microservices and learned to implement them with the Scala and Lagom framework.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)

Introduction to Akka Streams

The word stream is vastly overloaded in meaning in modern computing. It carries many different meanings depending on the context. For instance, in Java, in different times streaming meant an abstraction over blocking IO, non-blocking IO, and later, a way to express data processing queries.

In essence, a stream in computing is just a flow of data or instructions. Usually, the content of a stream is not loaded into memory fully. This possibility to process basically unlimited amounts of information on devices with limited memory capacity is a motivating factor for the rise of streams, popularity that has been happening recently.

The definition of the stream as a flow implies that it should have some source and a destination of data elements. In computing, these concepts are naturally expressed in the code in a way that on one side of the flow the code...