handouts/pep-ho.tex
author Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
Sat, 23 Sep 2023 23:49:44 +0100
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% !TEX program = xelatex
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\documentclass{article}
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\usepackage{../styles/style}
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\usepackage{../styles/langs}
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\usepackage{tikz}
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\usepackage{pgf}
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\usepackage{marvosym}
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pdated
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\usepackage{boxedminipage}
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\lstset{escapeinside={/*!}{!*/}}
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\newcommand{\annotation}[1]{\hfill\footnotesize{}#1}
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\usepackage{menukeys}
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%cheat sheet
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%http://worldline.github.io/scala-cheatsheet/
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% case class, apply, unapply
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% see https://medium.com/@thejasbabu/scala-pattern-matching-9c9e73ba9a8a
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% the art of programming
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% https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QdVFvsCWXrA
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% functional programming in Scala
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%https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1449311032/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=aleottshompag-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=1449311032
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% functional programming in C
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%https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0201419505/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=0201419505&linkCode=as2&tag=aleottshompag-20
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%speeding through haskell
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%https://openlibra.com/en/book/download/speeding-through-haskell
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% fp books --- ocaml
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% http://courses.cms.caltech.edu/cs134/cs134b/book.pdf
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% http://alexott.net/en/fp/books/
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%John Hughes’ simple words:
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%A combinator is a function which builds program fragments
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%from program fragments.
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%explain graph colouring program (examples from)
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%https://www.metalevel.at/prolog/optimization
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% nice example for map and reduce using Harry potter characters
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% https://www.matthewgerstman.com/map-filter-reduce/
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% interesting talk about differences in Java and Scala
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% Goto'19 conference ; about differences in type-system
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% https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e6n-Ci8V2CM
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% Timing
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%
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% xs.map(x => (x, xs.count(_==x)))
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%
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% vs  xs.groupBy(identity)
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%
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% first is quadratic, while second is linear.
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% contrast map with a for loop in imperative languages
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%
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% Let’s use a simple example of calculating sales tax on an array of
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% prices.
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%
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%       const prices = [19.99, 4.95, 25, 3.50];
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%       let new_prices = [];
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%
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%       for(let i=0; i < prices.length; i++) {
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%          new_prices.push(prices[i] * 1.06);
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%       }
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%
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% We can achieve the same results using .map():
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%
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% const prices = [19.99, 4.95, 25, 3.50]; 
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% let new_prices = prices.map(price => price * 1.06);
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%
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% The syntax above is condensed so let’s walk through it a bit. The
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% .map() method takes a callback, which can be thought of as a function.
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% That’s what is between the parentheses. The variable price is the name
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% that will be used to identify each value. Since there’s only one
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% input, we can omit the usual parentheses around the parameters.
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% potentially a worked example? Tetris in scala.js
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%  
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% https://medium.com/@michael.karen/learning-modern-javascript-with-tetris-92d532bcd057
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%
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% Scala videos
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%    https://www.youtube.com/user/DrMarkCLewis
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%% https://alvinalexander.com/downloads/HelloScala-FreePreview.pdf
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%% 
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%% Section 10 about strings; interpolations and multiline strings
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% Easy installation
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%https://alexarchambault.github.io/posts/2020-09-21-cs-setup.html
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% scala libraries
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%https://index.scala-lang.org
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% Learning functional programming is an opportunity to discover a new
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% way to represent programs, to approach problems, and to think about
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% languages. While programming with a functional language is still
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% fundamentally similar to programming with any other type of language
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% (examples of others being imperative or logic), it represents
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% programs and algorithms through distinct forms of abstraction and
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% gives you a new toolset with which to solve programming
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% problems. Additionally, many of the techniques of functional
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% programming are beginning to permeate new mainstream languages, so
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% taking the time now to develop a thorough understanding of them is
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% an investment which will pay great dividends.
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% Exact colors from NB
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\usepackage[breakable]{tcolorbox}
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\definecolor{incolor}{HTML}{303F9F}
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\definecolor{outcolor}{HTML}{D84315}
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\definecolor{cellborder}{HTML}{CFCFCF}
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\definecolor{cellbackground}{HTML}{F7F7F7}
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\begin{document}
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\fnote{\copyright{} Christian Urban, King's College London, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023}
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%\begin{tcolorbox}[breakable,size=fbox,boxrule=1pt,pad at break*=1mm,colback=cellbackground,colframe=cellborder]
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%  abd
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%\end{tcolorbox}
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\section*{A Crash-Course in Scala}
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\mbox{}\hfill\textit{``Scala --- \underline{S}lowly \underline{c}ompiled 
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\underline{a}cademic \underline{la}nguage''}\smallskip\\
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\mbox{}\hfill\textit{ --- a joke(?) found on Twitter}\bigskip
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\mbox{}\hfill\textit{``Life is too short for \texttt{malloc}.''}\smallskip\\
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\mbox{}\hfill\textit{ --- said Neal Ford at Oscon'13}\;\hr{https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7aYS9PcAITQ}\bigskip\\ 
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\subsection*{Introduction}
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\noindent
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Scala is a programming language that combines functional and
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object-oriented programming-styles. It has received quite a bit of
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attention in the last five or so years. One reason for this attention is
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that, like the Java programming language, Scala compiles to the Java
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Virtual Machine (JVM) and therefore Scala programs can run under MacOSX,
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Linux and Windows. Because of this it has also access to
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the myriads of Java libraries. Unlike Java, however, Scala often allows
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programmers to write very concise and elegant code.  Some therefore say
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``Scala is the better Java''.\footnote{from
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\url{https://www.slideshare.net/maximnovak/joy-of-scala}} 
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A number of companies---the Guardian, Dualingo, Coursera, FourSquare,
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Netflix, LinkedIn, ITV to name a few---either use Scala exclusively in
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production code, or at least to some substantial degree. Scala seems
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also useful in job-interviews (especially in data science) according to
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this anecdotal report
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\begin{quote}
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\url{http://techcrunch.com/2016/06/14/scala-is-the-new-golden-child}
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\end{quote}
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\noindent
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The official Scala compiler can be downloaded from
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\begin{quote}
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\url{http://www.scala-lang.org}\medskip
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\end{quote}
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\noindent\alert
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Just make sure you are using the version 3(!) of Scala. This is
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the version I am going to use in the lectures and in the coursework. This
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can be any version of Scala 3.X where $X=\{1,2,3\}$. Also the minor
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number does not matter. Note that this will be the first year I am
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using this version -- so some hiccups are bound to happen. Apologies
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in advance!\bigskip
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\noindent
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If you are interested, there are also experimental backend of Scala
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for generating JavaScript code (\url{https://www.scala-js.org}), and
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there is work under way to have a native Scala compiler generating
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X86-code (\url{http://www.scala-native.org}). There are also some
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tricks you can play with Scala programms running as native
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GraalVM~\hr{https://scala-cli.virtuslab.org/docs/cookbooks/native-images/}
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images.  Though be warned these backends are still rather beta or even
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alpha.
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\subsection*{VS Code and Scala}
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I found a convenient IDE for writing Scala programs is Microsoft's
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\textit{Visual Studio Code} (VS Code) which runs under MacOSX, Linux and
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obviously Windows.\footnote{\ldots{}unlike \emph{Microsoft Visual Studio}---note
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the minuscule difference in the name---which is a heavy-duty,
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Windows-only IDE\ldots{}jeez, with all their money could they not have come
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up with a completely different name for a complete different project?
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For the pedantic, Microsoft Visual Studio is an IDE, whereas Visual
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Studio Code is considered to be a \emph{source code editor}. Anybody knows what the
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difference is?} It can be downloaded for free from
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\begin{quote}
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\url{https://code.visualstudio.com}
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\end{quote}
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\noindent
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and should already come pre-installed in the Department (together with
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the Scala compiler). Being a project that just started in 2015, VS Code is
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relatively new and therefore far from perfect. However it includes a
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\textit{Marketplace} from which a multitude of extensions can be
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downloaded that make editing and running Scala code a little easier (see
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Figure~\ref{vscode} for my setup).
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\begin{figure}[t]
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\begin{boxedminipage}{\textwidth}  
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\begin{center}  
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\includegraphics[scale=0.15]{../pics/vscode.png}\\[-10mm]\mbox{}
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\end{center}
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\caption{My installation of VS Code includes the following
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  packages from Marketplace: \textbf{Scala Syntax (official)} 0.5.4,
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  \textbf{Code Runner} 0.11.6, \textbf{Code Spell Checker} 2.0.12,
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  \textbf{Rewrap} 1.14.0 and \textbf{Subtle Match
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  Brackets} 3.0.0. I have also bound the keys \keys{Ctrl} \keys{Ret} to the
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  action ``Run-Selected-Text-In-Active-Terminal'' in order to quickly
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  evaluate small code snippets in the Scala REPL. I use the internal
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  terminal to run Scala 2.13.6.\label{vscode}}
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\end{boxedminipage}
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\end{figure}  
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Actually \alert last year I switched to VS Codium, which is VS Code
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minus all the telemetry that is normally sent to Microsoft. Apart from
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the telemetry (and Copilot, which you are not supposed to use anyway),
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it works pretty much the same way as the original but is driven by a
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dedicated community, rather than a big company. You can download VS
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Codium from
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\begin{quote}
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\url{https://vscodium.com}
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\end{quote}
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What I like most about VS Code/Codium is that it provides easy access to the
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Scala REPL. But if you prefer another editor for coding, it is also
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painless to work with Scala completely on the command line (as you might
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have done with \texttt{g++} in the earlier part of PEP). For the
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lazybones among us, there are even online editors and environments for
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developing and running Scala programs: \textit{ScalaFiddle}
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and \textit{Scastie} are two of them. They require zero setup 
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(assuming you have a browser handy). You can access them at 
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\begin{quote}
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  \url{https://scalafiddle.io}\\
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  \url{https://scastie.scala-lang.org}\medskip
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\end{quote}
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\noindent
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But you should be careful if you use them for your coursework: they
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are meant to play around, not really for serious work. 
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As one might expect, Scala can be used with the heavy-duty IDEs
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Eclipse and IntelliJ.  A ready-made Scala bundle for Eclipse is
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available from
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\begin{quote}
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\url{http://scala-ide.org/download/sdk.html}
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\end{quote}
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\noindent
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Also IntelliJ includes plugins for Scala. \underline{\textbf{BUT}}, 
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I do \textbf{not} recommend the usage of either Eclipse or IntelliJ for PEP: these IDEs
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seem to make your life harder, rather than easier, for the small
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programs that we will write in this module. They are really meant to be used
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when you have a million-lines codebase instead of our small
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``toy-programs''\ldots{}for example why on earth am I required to create a
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completely new project with several subdirectories when I just want to
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try out 20-lines of Scala code? Your mileage may vary though.~\texttt{;o)}
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\subsection*{Why Functional Programming?}
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Before we go on, let me explain a bit more why we want to inflict upon
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you another programming language. You hopefully have mastered Java and
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C++\ldots{}the world should be your oyster, no? Well, matters are not as
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simple as one might wish. We do require Scala in PEP, but actually we do
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not religiously care whether you learn Scala---after all it is just a
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programming language (albeit a nifty one IMHO). What we do care about is
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that you learn about \textit{functional programming}. Scala is just the
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vehicle for that. Still, you need to learn Scala well enough to get good
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marks in PEP, but functional programming could perhaps equally be taught
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with Haskell, F\#, SML, Ocaml, Kotlin, Clojure, Scheme, Elm and many
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other functional programming languages. 
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%Your friendly lecturer just
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%happens to like Scala and the Department agreed that it is a good idea
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%to inflict Scala upon you.
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Very likely writing programs in a functional programming language is
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quite different from what you are used to in your study so far. It
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might even be totally alien to you. The reason is that functional
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programming seems to go against the core principles of
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\textit{imperative programming} (which is what you do in Java and
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C/C++ for example). The main idea of imperative programming is that
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you have some form of \emph{state} in your program and you
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continuously change this state by issuing some commands---for example
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for updating a field in an array or for adding one to a variable
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stored in memory and so on. The classic example for this style of
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programming is a \texttt{for}-loop in C/C++.  Consider the snippet:
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\begin{lstlisting}[language=C,numbers=none]
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for (int i = 10; i < 20; i++) { 
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      //...do something with i...
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}
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\end{lstlisting}
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\noindent Here the integer variable \texttt{i} embodies part of the
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state of the program, which is first set to \texttt{10} and then
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increased by one in each loop-iteration until it reaches \texttt{20}
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at which point the loop exits. When this code is compiled and actually
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runs, there will be some dedicated space reserved for \texttt{i} in
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memory. This space of typically 32 bits contains \texttt{i}'s current
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value\ldots\texttt{10} at the beginning, and then the content will be
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overwritten with new content in every iteration. The main point here
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is that this kind of updating, or overwriting, of memory is
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25.806\ldots or \textbf{THE ROOT OF ALL EVIL}!!
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\begin{center}
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\includegraphics[scale=0.25]{../pics/root-of-all-evil.png}
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\end{center}  
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\noindent
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\ldots{}Well, it is perfectly benign if you have a sequential program
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that gets run instruction by instruction...nicely one after another.
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This kind of running code uses a single core of your CPU and goes as
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fast as your CPU frequency, also called clock-speed, allows. The problem
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is that this clock-speed has not much increased over the past decade and
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no dramatic increases are predicted for any time soon. So you are a bit
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stuck. This is unlike previous generations of developers who could rely
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upon the fact that approximately every 2 years their code would run
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twice as fast  because the clock-speed of their CPUs got twice as fast.
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Unfortunately this does not happen any more nowadays. To get you out of
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this dreadful situation, CPU producers pile more and more cores into
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CPUs in order to make them more powerful and potentially make software
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faster. The task for you as developer is to take somehow advantage of
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these cores by running as much of your code as possible in parallel on
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as many cores you have available (typically 4-8 or even more in modern laptops
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and sometimes much more on high-end machines). In this situation
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\textit{mutable} variables like \texttt{i} in the C-code above are evil,
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or at least a major nuisance: Because if you want to distribute some of
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the loop-iterations over several cores that are currently idle in your
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system, you need to be extremely careful about who can read and
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overwrite the variable \texttt{i}.\footnote{If you are of the mistaken
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belief that nothing nasty can happen to \texttt{i} inside the
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\texttt{for}-loop, then you need to go back over the C++ material.}
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Especially the writing operation is critical because you do not want
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that conflicting writes mess about with \texttt{i}. Take my word: an
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untold amount of misery has arisen from this problem. The catch is that
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if you try to solve this problem in C/C++ or Java, and be as defensive
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as possible about reads and writes to \texttt{i}, then you need to
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synchronise access to it. The result is that very often your program
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waits more than it runs, thereby defeating the point of trying to run
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the program in parallel in the first place. If you are less defensive,
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then usually all hell breaks loose by seemingly obtaining random
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results. And forget the idea of being able to debug such code.
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The central idea of functional programming is to eliminate any state
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from programs---or at least from the ``interesting bits'' of the
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programs. Because then it is easy to parallelise the resulting
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programs: if you do not have any state, then once created, all memory
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content stays unchanged and reads to such memory are absolutely safe
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without the need of any synchronisation. An example is given in
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Figure~\ref{mand} where in the absence of the annoying state, Scala
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makes it very easy to calculate the Mandelbrot set on as many cores of
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your CPU as possible. Why is it so easy in this example? Because each
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pixel in the Mandelbrot set can be calculated independently and the
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calculation does not need to update any variable. It is so easy in
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fact that going from the sequential version of the Mandelbrot program
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to the parallel version can be achieved by adding just eight
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characters---in two places you have to add \texttt{.par}. Try the same
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in C/C++ or Java!
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\begin{figure}[p]
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\begin{boxedminipage}{\textwidth}
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A Scala program for generating pretty pictures of the Mandelbrot set.\smallskip\\ 
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(See \url{https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mandelbrot_set} or\\
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\phantom{(See }\url{https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aSg2Db3jF_4}):
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\begin{center}    
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\begin{tabular}{c}  
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\includegraphics[scale=0.11]{../pics/mand1.png}\\[-8mm]\mbox{}
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\end{tabular}
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\end{center}
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\begin{center}
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\begin{tabular}{@{}p{0.45\textwidth}|p{0.45\textwidth}@{}}
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  \bf sequential version: & \bf parallel version on 4 cores:\smallskip\\
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  {\hfill\includegraphics[scale=0.11]{../pics/mand4.png}\hfill} &
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diff changeset
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  {\hfill\includegraphics[scale=0.11]{../pics/mand3.png}\hfill} \\
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diff changeset
   402
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diff changeset
   403
{\footnotesize\begin{lstlisting}[xleftmargin=-1mm]
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for (y <- (0 until H)) {
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diff changeset
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  for (x <- (0 until W)) {
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diff changeset
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diff changeset
   407
    val c = start + 
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diff changeset
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      (x * d_x + y * d_y * i)
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diff changeset
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    val iters = iterations(c, max) 
191
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diff changeset
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    val colour = 
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      if (iters == max) black 
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   412
      else colours(iters % 16)
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diff changeset
   413
191
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    pixel(x, y, colour)
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diff changeset
   415
  }
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diff changeset
   416
  viewer.updateUI()
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diff changeset
   417
}   
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\end{lstlisting}}   
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& 
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{\footnotesize\begin{lstlisting}[xleftmargin=0mm]
400
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for (y <- (0 until H).par) {
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  for (x <- (0 until W).par) {
187
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diff changeset
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diff changeset
   424
    val c = start + 
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      (x * d_x + y * d_y * i)
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    val iters = iterations(c, max) 
191
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diff changeset
   427
    val colour = 
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diff changeset
   428
      if (iters == max) black 
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diff changeset
   429
      else colours(iters % 16)
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diff changeset
   430
  
191
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diff changeset
   431
    pixel(x, y, colour)
187
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diff changeset
   432
  }
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diff changeset
   433
  viewer.updateUI()
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diff changeset
   434
}   
191
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   435
\end{lstlisting}}\\[-2mm]
187
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   436
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   437
\centering\includegraphics[scale=0.5]{../pics/cpu2.png} &
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diff changeset
   438
\centering\includegraphics[scale=0.5]{../pics/cpu1.png}
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\end{tabular}
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\end{center}
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\caption{The code of the ``main'' loops in my version of the mandelbrot program.
191
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   442
The parallel version differs only in \texttt{.par} being added to the
195
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``ranges'' of the x and y coordinates. As can be seen from the CPU loads, in
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diff changeset
   444
the sequential version there is a lower peak for an extended period,
191
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   445
while in the parallel version there is a short sharp burst for
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diff changeset
   446
essentially the same workload\ldots{}meaning you get more work done 
195
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diff changeset
   447
in a shorter amount of time. This easy \emph{parallelisation} 
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diff changeset
   448
only works reliably with an immutable program.
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   449
\label{mand}} 
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\end{boxedminipage}
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   451
\end{figure}  
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   452
275
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But remember this easy parallelisation of code requires that we have no
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parents: 274
diff changeset
   454
state in our programs\ldots{}that is no counters like \texttt{i} in
eb1b4ad23941 updated
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   455
\texttt{for}-loops. You might then ask, how do I write loops without
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diff changeset
   456
such counters? Well, teaching you that this is possible is one of the
eb1b4ad23941 updated
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diff changeset
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main points of the Scala-part in PEP. I can assure you it is possible,
eb1b4ad23941 updated
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diff changeset
   458
but you have to get your head around it. Once you have mastered this, it
eb1b4ad23941 updated
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diff changeset
   459
will be fun to have no state in your programs (a side product is that it
eb1b4ad23941 updated
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parents: 274
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   460
much easier to debug state-less code and also more often than not easier
eb1b4ad23941 updated
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   461
to understand). So have fun with Scala!\footnote{If you are still not
eb1b4ad23941 updated
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   462
convinced about the function programming ``thing'', there are a few more
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   463
arguments: a lot of research in programming languages happens to take
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   464
place in functional programming languages. This has resulted in
eb1b4ad23941 updated
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parents: 274
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ultra-useful features such as pattern-matching, strong type-systems,
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parents: 274
diff changeset
   466
laziness, implicits, algebraic datatypes  to name a few. Imperative
eb1b4ad23941 updated
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parents: 274
diff changeset
   467
languages seem to often lag behind in adopting them: I know, for
eb1b4ad23941 updated
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parents: 274
diff changeset
   468
example, that Java will at some point in the future support
eb1b4ad23941 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 274
diff changeset
   469
pattern-matching, which has been used for example in SML for at least
eb1b4ad23941 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 274
diff changeset
   470
40(!) years. See
441
3bfe81972674 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 426
diff changeset
   471
\url{https://openjdk.org/projects/amber/design-notes/patterns/pattern-matching-for-java}.
275
eb1b4ad23941 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 274
diff changeset
   472
Automatic garbage collection was included in Java in 1995; the
eb1b4ad23941 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 274
diff changeset
   473
functional language LISP had this already in 1958. Generics were added
eb1b4ad23941 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 274
diff changeset
   474
to Java 5 in 2004; the functional language SML had it since 1990.
277
acaf2099406a updated
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parents: 275
diff changeset
   475
Higher-order functions were added to C\# in 2007, to Java 8 in
275
eb1b4ad23941 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 274
diff changeset
   476
2014; again LISP had them since 1958. Also Rust, a C-like programming
eb1b4ad23941 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 274
diff changeset
   477
language that has been developed since 2010 and is gaining quite some
eb1b4ad23941 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 274
diff changeset
   478
interest, borrows many ideas from functional programming from
277
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
   479
yesteryear.}\medskip
170
37b1bfcdba79 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 152
diff changeset
   480
277
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
   481
\noindent
441
3bfe81972674 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 426
diff changeset
   482
If you need any after-work distractions, you might have fun reading
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   483
the following article about FP (functional programming) --- you
441
3bfe81972674 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 426
diff changeset
   484
might have to disable your browser cookies though if you want to read
3bfe81972674 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 426
diff changeset
   485
it for free. And spoiler alert: This is tongue-in-cheek \texttt{;o)}
277
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
   486
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
   487
\begin{quote}
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   488
  \url{https://archive.ph/vrofC}
277
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
   489
\end{quote}
188
937c995b047a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 187
diff changeset
   490
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   491
\subsection*{The Very Basics}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   492
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   493
Let us get back to Scala: One advantage of Scala over Java is that it
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   494
includes an interpreter (a REPL, or
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   495
\underline{R}ead-\underline{E}val-\underline{P}rint-\underline{L}oop)
181
31ba76ce016d updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 180
diff changeset
   496
with which you can run and test small code snippets without the need
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   497
of a compiler. This helps a lot with interactively developing
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   498
programs. It is my preferred way of writing small Scala programs. Once
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   499
you installed Scala, you can start the interpreter by typing on the
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   500
command line:
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   501
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   502
\begin{lstlisting}[language={},numbers=none,basicstyle=\ttfamily\small]
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   503
$ scala
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   504
Welcome to Scala 3.3.1 (17.0.8.1, Java OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM).
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   505
Type in expressions for evaluation. Or try :help.  
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   506
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   507
scala>
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   508
\end{lstlisting}%$
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   509
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   510
\noindent The precise response may vary depending
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   511
on the version and platform where you installed Scala. Make sure
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   512
you have installed Scala version 3. At the Scala
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   513
prompt you can type things like \code{2 + 3}\;\keys{Ret} and
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   514
the output will be
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   515
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   516
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none,language={}]
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   517
scala> 2 + 3
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   518
val res0: Int = 5
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   519
\end{lstlisting}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   520
188
937c995b047a updated
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parents: 187
diff changeset
   521
\noindent The answer means that he result of the addition is of type
124
c45d3cd9a749 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 123
diff changeset
   522
\code{Int} and the actual result is 5; \code{res0} is a name that
125
dcaab8068baa updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 124
diff changeset
   523
Scala gives automatically to the result. You can reuse this name later
188
937c995b047a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 187
diff changeset
   524
on, for example
181
31ba76ce016d updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 180
diff changeset
   525
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   526
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none,language={}]
181
31ba76ce016d updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 180
diff changeset
   527
scala> res0 + 4
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   528
val res1: Int = 9
181
31ba76ce016d updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 180
diff changeset
   529
\end{lstlisting}
31ba76ce016d updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 180
diff changeset
   530
31ba76ce016d updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 180
diff changeset
   531
\noindent
31ba76ce016d updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 180
diff changeset
   532
Another classic example you can try out is
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   533
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   534
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none,language={}]
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   535
scala> print("hello world")
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   536
hello world
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   537
\end{lstlisting}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   538
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   539
\noindent Note that in this case there is no result. The
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   540
reason is that \code{print} does not actually produce a result
124
c45d3cd9a749 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 123
diff changeset
   541
(there is no \code{resX} and no type), rather it is a
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   542
function that causes the \emph{side-effect} of printing out a
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   543
string. Once you are more familiar with the functional
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   544
programming-style, you will know what the difference is
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   545
between a function that returns a result, like addition, and a
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   546
function that causes a side-effect, like \code{print}. We
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   547
shall come back to this point later, but if you are curious
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   548
now, the latter kind of functions always has \code{Unit} as
188
937c995b047a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 187
diff changeset
   549
return type. It is just not printed by Scala. 
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   550
181
31ba76ce016d updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 180
diff changeset
   551
You can try more examples with the Scala REPL, but feel free to
31ba76ce016d updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 180
diff changeset
   552
first guess what the result is (not all answers by Scala are obvious):
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   553
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   554
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   555
scala> 2 + 2
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   556
scala> 1 / 2
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   557
scala> 1.0 / 2
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   558
scala> 1 / 2.0
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   559
scala> 1 / 0
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   560
scala> 1.0 / 0.0
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   561
scala> true == false
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   562
scala> true && false
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   563
scala> 1 > 1.0
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   564
scala> "12345".length
181
31ba76ce016d updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 180
diff changeset
   565
scala> List(1,2,1).size
31ba76ce016d updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 180
diff changeset
   566
scala> Set(1,2,1).size
265
59779ce322a6 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 264
diff changeset
   567
scala> List(1) == List(1)
59779ce322a6 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 264
diff changeset
   568
scala> Array(1) == Array(1)
59779ce322a6 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 264
diff changeset
   569
scala> Array(1).sameElements(Array(1))
335
7e00d2b13b04 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 334
diff changeset
   570
\end{lstlisting}
7e00d2b13b04 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 334
diff changeset
   571
7e00d2b13b04 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 334
diff changeset
   572
\noindent
7e00d2b13b04 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 334
diff changeset
   573
Also observe carefully what Scala responds in the following 
7e00d2b13b04 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 334
diff changeset
   574
three instances involving the constant \lstinline!1!---can 
7e00d2b13b04 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 334
diff changeset
   575
you explain the differences?
7e00d2b13b04 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 334
diff changeset
   576
7e00d2b13b04 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 334
diff changeset
   577
7e00d2b13b04 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 334
diff changeset
   578
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
7e00d2b13b04 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 334
diff changeset
   579
scala> 1
7e00d2b13b04 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 334
diff changeset
   580
scala> 1L
7e00d2b13b04 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 334
diff changeset
   581
scala> 1F
181
31ba76ce016d updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 180
diff changeset
   582
\end{lstlisting}\smallskip
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   583
335
7e00d2b13b04 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 334
diff changeset
   584
7e00d2b13b04 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 334
diff changeset
   585
181
31ba76ce016d updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 180
diff changeset
   586
\noindent
31ba76ce016d updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 180
diff changeset
   587
Please take the Scala REPL seriously: If you want to take advantage of my
31ba76ce016d updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 180
diff changeset
   588
reference implementation for the assignments, you will need to be
31ba76ce016d updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 180
diff changeset
   589
able to ``play around'' with it!
31ba76ce016d updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 180
diff changeset
   590
31ba76ce016d updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 180
diff changeset
   591
\subsection*{Standalone Scala Apps}
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   592
277
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
   593
If you want to write a standalone app in Scala, you can
197
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 195
diff changeset
   594
implement an object that is an instance of \code{App}. For example
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 195
diff changeset
   595
write
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   596
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   597
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   598
object Hello extends App {
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   599
    println("hello world")
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   600
}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   601
\end{lstlisting}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   602
197
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 195
diff changeset
   603
\noindent save it in a file, say {\tt hello-world.scala}, and
188
937c995b047a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 187
diff changeset
   604
then run the compiler (\texttt{scalac}) and start the runtime
181
31ba76ce016d updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 180
diff changeset
   605
environment (\texttt{scala}):
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   606
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   607
\begin{lstlisting}[language={},numbers=none,basicstyle=\ttfamily\small]
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   608
$ scalac hello-world.scala
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   609
$ scala Hello
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   610
hello world
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   611
\end{lstlisting}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   612
124
c45d3cd9a749 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 123
diff changeset
   613
\noindent
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   614
Like Java, Scala targets the JVM and consequently
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   615
Scala programs can also be executed by the bog-standard Java
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   616
Runtime. This only requires the inclusion of {\tt
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   617
scala-library.jar}, which on my computer can be done as
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   618
follows:
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   619
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   620
\begin{lstlisting}[language={},numbers=none,basicstyle=\ttfamily\small]
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   621
$ scalac hello-world.scala
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   622
$ java -cp /usr/local/src/scala/lib/scala-library.jar:. Hello
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   623
hello world
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   624
\end{lstlisting}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   625
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   626
\noindent You might need to adapt the path to where you have
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   627
installed Scala.
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   628
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   629
\subsection*{Values}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   630
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   631
\begin{tcolorbox}[colback=red!5!white,colframe=red!75!black]
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   632
  Do not use \code{var} in your code for PEP! This declares a mutable variable.
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   633
  Only use \code{val}!
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   634
\end{tcolorbox}\medskip  
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   635
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   636
\noindent
124
c45d3cd9a749 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 123
diff changeset
   637
In the lectures I will try to avoid as much as possible the term
c45d3cd9a749 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 123
diff changeset
   638
\emph{variables} familiar from other programming languages. The reason
c45d3cd9a749 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 123
diff changeset
   639
is that Scala has \emph{values}, which can be seen as abbreviations of
271
48e12e7aee6e updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 270
diff changeset
   640
larger expressions. The keyword for defining values is \code{val}.
48e12e7aee6e updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 270
diff changeset
   641
For example
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   642
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   643
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   644
scala> val x = 42
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   645
val x: Int = 42
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   646
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   647
scala> val y = 3 + 4
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   648
val y: Int = 7
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   649
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   650
scala> val z = x / y
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   651
val z: Int = 6
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   652
\end{lstlisting}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   653
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   654
\noindent
272
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   655
As can be seen, we first define \code{x} and {y} with admittedly some silly
271
48e12e7aee6e updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 270
diff changeset
   656
expressions, and then reuse these values in the definition of \code{z}.
272
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   657
All easy, right? Why the kerfuffle about values? Well, values are
271
48e12e7aee6e updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 270
diff changeset
   658
\emph{immutable}. You cannot change their value after you defined them.
48e12e7aee6e updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 270
diff changeset
   659
If you try to reassign \code{z} above, Scala will yell at you:
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   660
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   661
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   662
scala> z = 9
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   663
-- [E052] Type Error: -----------------------------------
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   664
1 |z = 9
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   665
  |^^^^^
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   666
  |Reassignment to val z
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   667
  | ...
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   668
1 error found
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   669
\end{lstlisting}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   670
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   671
\noindent
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   672
So it would be a bit absurd to call values as variables...you cannot
195
fc3ac7b70a06 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 193
diff changeset
   673
change them; they cannot vary. You might think you can reassign them like
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   674
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   675
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   676
scala> val x = 42
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   677
scala> val z = x / 7
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   678
scala> val x = 70
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   679
scala> println(z) 
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   680
\end{lstlisting}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   681
124
c45d3cd9a749 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 123
diff changeset
   682
\noindent but try to guess what Scala will print out 
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   683
for \code{z}?  Will it be \code{6} or \code{10}? A final word about
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   684
values: Try to stick to the convention that names of values should be
188
937c995b047a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 187
diff changeset
   685
lower case, like \code{x}, \code{y}, \code{foo41} and so on. Upper-case
271
48e12e7aee6e updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 270
diff changeset
   686
names you should reserve for what is called \emph{constructors}. And 
48e12e7aee6e updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 270
diff changeset
   687
forgive me when I call values as variables\ldots{}it is just something that
48e12e7aee6e updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 270
diff changeset
   688
has been in imprinted into my developer-DNA during my early days and
272
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   689
is difficult to get rid of.~\texttt{;o)}  
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   690
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   691
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   692
\subsection*{Function Definitions}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   693
181
31ba76ce016d updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 180
diff changeset
   694
We do functional programming! So defining functions will be our main occupation.
182
d3d912d7e17f updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 181
diff changeset
   695
As an example, a function named \code{f} taking a single argument of type 
181
31ba76ce016d updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 180
diff changeset
   696
\code{Int} can be defined in Scala as follows:
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   697
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   698
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
181
31ba76ce016d updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 180
diff changeset
   699
def f(x: Int) : String = ...EXPR...
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   700
\end{lstlisting} 
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   701
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   702
\noindent
124
c45d3cd9a749 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 123
diff changeset
   703
This function returns the value resulting from evaluating the expression
271
48e12e7aee6e updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 270
diff changeset
   704
\code{EXPR} (whatever is substituted for this). Since we declared
48e12e7aee6e updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 270
diff changeset
   705
\code{String}, the result of this function will be of type
48e12e7aee6e updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 270
diff changeset
   706
\code{String}. It is a good habit to always include this information
272
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   707
about the return type, while it is only strictly necessary to give this
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   708
type in recursive functions. Simple examples of Scala functions are:
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   709
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   710
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   711
def incr(x: Int) : Int = x + 1
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   712
def double(x: Int) : Int = x + x
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   713
def square(x: Int) : Int = x * x
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   714
\end{lstlisting}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   715
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   716
\noindent
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   717
The general scheme for a function is
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   718
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   719
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   720
def fname(arg1: ty1, arg2: ty2,..., argn: tyn): rty = {
271
48e12e7aee6e updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 270
diff changeset
   721
  ...BODY...
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   722
}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   723
\end{lstlisting}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   724
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   725
\noindent
197
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 195
diff changeset
   726
where each argument, \texttt{arg1}, \texttt{arg2} and so on, requires 
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 195
diff changeset
   727
its type and the result type of the
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 195
diff changeset
   728
function, \code{rty}, should also be given. If the body of the function is
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   729
more complex, then it can be enclosed in braces, like above. If it
124
c45d3cd9a749 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 123
diff changeset
   730
is just a simple expression, like \code{x + 1}, you can omit the
195
fc3ac7b70a06 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 193
diff changeset
   731
braces. Very often functions are recursive (that is call themselves),
fc3ac7b70a06 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 193
diff changeset
   732
like the venerable factorial function:
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   733
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   734
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
271
48e12e7aee6e updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 270
diff changeset
   735
def fact(n: Int) : Int = 
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   736
  if (n == 0) 1 else n * fact(n - 1)
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   737
\end{lstlisting}
188
937c995b047a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 187
diff changeset
   738
937c995b047a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 187
diff changeset
   739
\noindent
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   740
where we have to give the return type \code{Int}. Note we could also
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   741
have written this with braces as
271
48e12e7aee6e updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 270
diff changeset
   742
48e12e7aee6e updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 270
diff changeset
   743
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
48e12e7aee6e updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 270
diff changeset
   744
def fact(n: Int) : Int = {
48e12e7aee6e updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 270
diff changeset
   745
  if (n == 0) 1 
48e12e7aee6e updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 270
diff changeset
   746
  else n * fact(n - 1)
48e12e7aee6e updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 270
diff changeset
   747
}    
48e12e7aee6e updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 270
diff changeset
   748
\end{lstlisting}
48e12e7aee6e updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 270
diff changeset
   749
48e12e7aee6e updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 270
diff changeset
   750
\noindent
272
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   751
but this seems a bit overkill for a small function like \code{fact}.
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   752
Notice that Scala does not have a \code{then}-keyword in an
335
7e00d2b13b04 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 334
diff changeset
   753
\code{if}-statement. Also important is that there should be always an
7e00d2b13b04 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 334
diff changeset
   754
\code{else}-branch. Never write an \code{if} without an \code{else},
7e00d2b13b04 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 334
diff changeset
   755
unless you know what you are doing! While \code{def} is the main
7e00d2b13b04 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 334
diff changeset
   756
mechanism for defining functions, there are a few other ways for doing
7e00d2b13b04 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 334
diff changeset
   757
this. We will see some of them in the next sections.
272
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   758
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   759
Before we go on, let me explain one tricky point in function
335
7e00d2b13b04 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 334
diff changeset
   760
definitions, especially in larger definitions. What does a Scala
7e00d2b13b04 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 334
diff changeset
   761
function return as result? Scala has a \code{return} keyword, but it is
272
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   762
used for something different than in Java (and C/C++). Therefore please
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   763
make sure no \code{return} slips into your Scala code.
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   764
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   765
So in the absence of \code{return}, what value does a Scala function
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   766
actually produce? A rule-of-thumb is whatever is in the last line of the
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   767
function is the value that will be returned. Consider the following
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   768
example:\footnote{We could have written this function in just one line,
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   769
but for the sake of argument let's keep the two intermediate values.}
272
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   770
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   771
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
277
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
   772
def average(xs: List[Int]) : Int = {
272
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   773
  val s = xs.sum
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   774
  val n = xs.length
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   775
  s / n
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   776
}    
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   777
\end{lstlisting}
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   778
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   779
\noindent In this example the expression \code{s / n} is in the last
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   780
line of the function---so this will be the result the function
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   781
calculates. The two lines before just calculate intermediate values.
335
7e00d2b13b04 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 334
diff changeset
   782
This principle of the ``last-line'' comes in handy when you need to
7e00d2b13b04 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 334
diff changeset
   783
print out values, for example, for debugging purposes. Suppose you want
272
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   784
rewrite the function as
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   785
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   786
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
277
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
   787
def average(xs: List[Int]) : Int = {
272
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   788
  val s = xs.sum
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   789
  val n = xs.length
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   790
  val h = xs.head
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   791
  println(s"Input $xs with first element $h")
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   792
  s / n
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   793
}    
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   794
\end{lstlisting}
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   795
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   796
\noindent
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   797
Here the function still only returns the expression \code{s / n} in
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   798
the last line.  The \code{println} before just prints out some
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   799
information about the input of this function, but does not contribute
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   800
to the result of the function. Similarly, the value \code{h} is used
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   801
in the \code{println} but does not contribute to what integer is
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   802
returned by the function.
335
7e00d2b13b04 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 334
diff changeset
   803
7e00d2b13b04 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 334
diff changeset
   804
A caveat is that the idea with the ``last line'' is only a rough
7e00d2b13b04 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 334
diff changeset
   805
rule-of-thumb. A better rule might be: the last expression that is
7e00d2b13b04 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 334
diff changeset
   806
evaluated in the function. Consider the following version of
7e00d2b13b04 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 334
diff changeset
   807
\code{average}:
272
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   808
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   809
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
277
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
   810
def average(xs: List[Int]) : Int = {
272
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   811
  if (xs.length == 0) 0
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   812
  else xs.sum / xs.length
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   813
}    
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   814
\end{lstlisting}
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   815
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   816
\noindent
335
7e00d2b13b04 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 334
diff changeset
   817
What does this function return? Well there are two possibilities: either
7e00d2b13b04 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 334
diff changeset
   818
the result of \code{xs.sum / xs.length} in the last line provided the
7e00d2b13b04 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 334
diff changeset
   819
list \code{xs} is nonempty, \textbf{or} if the list is empty, then it
7e00d2b13b04 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 334
diff changeset
   820
will return \code{0} from the \code{if}-branch (which is technically not
7e00d2b13b04 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 334
diff changeset
   821
the last line, but the last expression evaluated by the function in the
272
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   822
empty-case).
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   823
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   824
Summing up, do not use \code{return} in your Scala code! A function
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   825
returns what is evaluated by the function as the last expression. There
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   826
is always only one such last expression. Previous expressions might
277
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
   827
calculate intermediate values, but they are not returned. If your
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
   828
function is supposed to return multiple things, then one way in Scala is
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
   829
to use tuples. For example returning the minimum, average and maximum
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
   830
can be achieved by
271
48e12e7aee6e updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 270
diff changeset
   831
277
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
   832
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
   833
def avr_minmax(xs: List[Int]) : (Int, Int, Int) = {
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
   834
  if (xs.length == 0) (0, 0, 0)
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
   835
  else (xs.min, xs.sum / xs.length, xs.max)
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
   836
}    
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
   837
\end{lstlisting}
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
   838
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
   839
\noindent
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
   840
which still satisfies the rule-of-thumb.
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
   841
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   842
\begin{tcolorbox}[colback=red!5!white,colframe=red!75!black]
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   843
  Do not use \code{return} in your code to indicate what a function
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   844
  produces as a result! It has a different meaning in Scala than in
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   845
  Java. It can change the meaning of your program, and you should
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   846
  never use it.
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   847
\end{tcolorbox}
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   848
277
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
   849
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
   850
\subsection*{Loops, or Better the Absence Thereof}
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   851
272
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   852
Coming from Java or C/C++, you might be surprised that Scala does
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   853
not really have loops. It has instead, what is in functional
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   854
programming called, \emph{maps}. To illustrate how they work,
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   855
let us assume you have a list of numbers from 1 to 8 and want to
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   856
build the list of squares. The list of numbers from 1 to 8 
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   857
can be constructed in Scala as follows:
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   858
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   859
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none,language={}]
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   860
scala> (1 to 8).toList
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   861
val res1: List[Int] = List(1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8)
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   862
\end{lstlisting}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   863
197
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 195
diff changeset
   864
\noindent Generating from this list the list of corresponding 
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 195
diff changeset
   865
squares in a programming language such as Java, you would assume 
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 195
diff changeset
   866
the list is given as a kind of array. You would then iterate, or loop,
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   867
an index over this array and replace each entry in the array
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   868
by the square. Right? In Scala, and in other functional
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   869
programming languages, you use maps to achieve the same. 
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   870
272
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   871
A map essentially takes a function that describes how each element is
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   872
transformed (in this example the function is $n \rightarrow n * n$) and
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   873
a list over which this function should work. Pictorially you can think
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   874
of the idea behind maps as follows:
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   875
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   876
\begin{center}
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   877
\begin{tikzpicture}
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   878
                      
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   879
  \node (A0) at (1.2,0) {\texttt{List(}};
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   880
  \node (A1) at (2.0,0) {\texttt{1\makebox[0mm]{ ,}}};
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   881
  \node (A2) at (2.9,0) {\texttt{2\makebox[0mm]{ ,}}};
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   882
  \node (A3) at (3.8,0) {\texttt{3\makebox[0mm]{ ,}}};
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   883
  \node (A4) at (4.7,0) {\texttt{4\makebox[0mm]{ ,}}};
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   884
  \node (A5) at (5.6,0) {\texttt{5\makebox[0mm]{ ,}}};
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   885
  \node (A6) at (6.5,0) {\texttt{6\makebox[0mm]{ ,}}};
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   886
  \node (A7) at (7.4,0) {\texttt{7\makebox[0mm]{ ,}}};
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   887
  \node (A8) at (8.3,0) {\texttt{8)}};
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   888
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   889
  \node (B0) at (1.2,-3) {\texttt{List(}};
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   890
  \node (B1) at (2.0,-3) {\texttt{1\makebox[0mm]{ ,}}};
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   891
  \node (B2) at (3.0,-3) {\texttt{4\makebox[0mm]{ ,}}};
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   892
  \node (B3) at (4.1,-3) {\texttt{9\makebox[0mm]{ ,}}};
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   893
  \node (B4) at (5.2,-3) {\texttt{16\makebox[0mm]{ ,}}};
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   894
  \node (B5) at (6.3,-3) {\texttt{25\makebox[0mm]{ ,}}};
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   895
  \node (B6) at (7.4,-3) {\texttt{36\makebox[0mm]{ ,}}};
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   896
  \node (B7) at (8.4,-3) {\texttt{49\makebox[0mm]{ ,}}};
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   897
  \node (B8) at (9.4,-3) {\texttt{64\makebox[0mm]{ )}}};
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   898
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   899
  \draw [->,line width=1mm] (A1.south) -- (B1.north);
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   900
  \draw [->,line width=1mm] (A2.south) -- (B2.north);
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   901
  \draw [->,line width=1mm] (A3.south) -- (B3.north);
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   902
  \draw [->,line width=1mm] (A4.south) -- (B4.north);
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   903
  \draw [->,line width=1mm] (A5.south) -- (B5.north);
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   904
  \draw [->,line width=1mm] (A6.south) -- (B6.north);
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   905
  \draw [->,line width=1mm] (A7.south) -- (B7.north);
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   906
  \draw [->,line width=1mm] (A8.south) -- (B8.north);
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   907
277
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
   908
  \node [red] (Q0) at (-0.3,-0.3) {\large\texttt{n}}; 
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
   909
  \node (Q1) at (-0.3,-0.4) {};
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
   910
  \node (Q2) at (-0.3,-2.5) {};
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
   911
  \node [red] (Q3) at (-0.3,-2.65) {\large\texttt{n\,*\,n}};
272
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   912
  \draw [->,red,line width=1mm] (Q1.south) -- (Q2.north);
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   913
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   914
  \node [red] at (-1.3,-1.5) {\huge{}\it\textbf{map}};
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   915
 \end{tikzpicture}
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   916
\end{center}
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   917
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   918
\noindent
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   919
On top is the ``input'' list we want to transform; on the left is the
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   920
``map'' function for how to transform each element in the input list
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   921
(the square function in this case); at the bottom is the result list of
277
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
   922
the map. This means that a map generates a \emph{new} list, unlike a
273
b19227660752 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 272
diff changeset
   923
for-loop in Java or C/C++ which would most likely just update the
277
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
   924
existing list/array.
272
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   925
277
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
   926
Now there are two ways for expressing such maps in Scala. The first way is
272
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   927
called a \emph{for-comprehension}. The keywords are \code{for} and
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   928
\code{yield}. Squaring the numbers from 1 to 8 with a for-comprehension
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   929
would look as follows:
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   930
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   931
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   932
scala> for (n <- (1 to 8).toList) yield n * n
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   933
val res2: List[Int] = List(1, 4, 9, 16, 25, 36, 49, 64)
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   934
\end{lstlisting}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   935
272
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   936
\noindent  This for-comprehension states that from the list of numbers
277
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
   937
we draw some elements. We use the name \code{n} to range over these
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
   938
elements (whereby the name is arbitrary; we could use something more
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
   939
descriptive if we wanted to). Using \code{n} we compute the result of
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
   940
\code{n * n} after the \code{yield}. This way of writing a map resembles
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
   941
a bit the for-loops from imperative languages, even though the ideas
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
   942
behind for-loops and for-comprehensions are quite different. Also, this
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
   943
is a simple example---what comes after \code{yield} can be a complex
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
   944
expression enclosed in \texttt{\{...\}}. A more complicated example
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
   945
might be
272
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   946
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   947
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   948
scala> for (n <- (1 to 8).toList) yield {
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   949
         val i = n + 1
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   950
         val j = n - 1
273
b19227660752 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 272
diff changeset
   951
         i * j + 1
272
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   952
       }
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   953
val res3: List[Int] = List(1, 4, 9, 16, 25, 36, 49, 64)
272
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   954
\end{lstlisting}
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   955
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   956
Let us come back to the simple example of squaring a list of numbers.
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   957
As you can see in the for-comprehensions above, we specified the list
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   958
where each \code{n} comes from, namely \code{(1 to 8).toList}, and how
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   959
each element needs to be transformed, the expression after the
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   960
\code{yield}. This can also be expressed in a second way in Scala by
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   961
using directly the function \code{map} as follows:
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   962
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   963
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none,language={}]
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   964
scala> (1 to 8).toList.map(n => n * n)
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   965
val res3 = List(1, 4, 9, 16, 25, 36, 49, 64)
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   966
\end{lstlisting}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   967
272
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   968
\noindent In this way, the expression \code{n => n * n} stands for the
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   969
function that calculates the square (this is how the \code{n}s are
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   970
transformed by the map).  It might not be obvious, but
277
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
   971
the for-comprehensions above are just syntactic sugar: when compiling such
273
b19227660752 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 272
diff changeset
   972
code, Scala translates for-comprehensions into equivalent maps. This
b19227660752 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 272
diff changeset
   973
even works when for-comprehensions get more complicated (see below).
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   974
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   975
The very charming feature of Scala is that such maps or
272
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   976
for-comprehensions can be written for any kind of data collection, such
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   977
as lists, sets, vectors, options and so on. For example if we instead
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
   978
compute the remainders modulo 3 of this list, we can write
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   979
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   980
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none,language={}]
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   981
scala> (1 to 8).toList.map(n => n % 3)
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   982
val res4 = List(1, 2, 0, 1, 2, 0, 1, 2)
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   983
\end{lstlisting}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   984
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   985
\noindent If we, however, transform the numbers 1 to 8 not
270
b9eaa5cdec4a updated
Christian Urban <christian dot urban at kcl dot ac dot uk>
parents: 269
diff changeset
   986
into a list, but into a set, and then compute the remainders
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   987
modulo 3 we obtain
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   988
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   989
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none,language={}]
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   990
scala> (1 to 8).toSet.map(n => n % 3)
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   991
val res5 = Set(2, 1, 0)
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   992
\end{lstlisting}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
   993
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   994
\noindent This\footnote{This returns actually \code{HashSet(1, 2, 3)},
301
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
   995
but this is just an implementation detail of how sets are implemented in
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
   996
Scala.} is the correct result for sets, as there are only three
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
   997
equivalence classes of integers modulo 3.  Since maps and
301
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
   998
for-comprehensions are just syntactic variants of each other, the latter
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
   999
can also be written as
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1000
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1001
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1002
scala> for (n <- (1 to 8).toSet) yield n % 3
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1003
val res5 = Set(2, 1, 0)
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1004
\end{lstlisting}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1005
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1006
For-comprehensions can also be nested and the selection of 
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1007
elements can be guarded (or filtered). For example if we want to pair up
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1008
the numbers 1 to 4 with the letters a to c, we can write
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1009
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1010
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1011
scala> for (n <- (1 to 4).toList; 
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1012
            m <- ('a' to 'c').toList) yield (n, m)
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1013
val res6 = List((1,a), (1,b), (1,c), (2,a), (2,b), (2,c), 
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1014
                (3,a), (3,b), (3,c), (4,a), (4,b), (4,c))
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1015
\end{lstlisting}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1016
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1017
\noindent 
272
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
  1018
In this example the for-comprehension ranges over two lists, and
277
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
  1019
produces a list of pairs as output. Or, if we want to find all pairs of
272
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
  1020
numbers between 1 and 3 where the sum is an even number, we can write
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1021
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1022
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1023
scala> for (n <- (1 to 3).toList; 
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1024
            m <- (1 to 3).toList;
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1025
            if (n + m) % 2 == 0) yield (n, m)
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1026
val res7 = List((1,1), (1,3), (2,2), (3,1), (3,3))
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1027
\end{lstlisting}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1028
272
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
  1029
\noindent The \code{if}-condition in this for-comprehension filters out
277
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
  1030
all pairs where the sum is not even (therefore \code{(1, 2)}, \code{(2,
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
  1031
1)} and \code{(3, 2)} are not in the result because their sum is odd). 
272
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
  1032
278
0c2481cd8b1c updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 277
diff changeset
  1033
To summarise, maps (or for-comprehensions) transform one collection into
273
b19227660752 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 272
diff changeset
  1034
another. For example a list of \code{Int}s into a list of squares, and
b19227660752 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 272
diff changeset
  1035
so on. There is no need for for-loops in Scala. But please do not be
b19227660752 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 272
diff changeset
  1036
tempted to write anything like
272
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
  1037
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
  1038
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
  1039
scala> val cs = ('a' to 'h').toList
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
  1040
scala> for (n <- (0 until cs.length).toList) 
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
  1041
          yield cs(n).capitalize
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1042
val res8: List[Char] = List(A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H)
272
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
  1043
\end{lstlisting}
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
  1044
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
  1045
\noindent
277
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
  1046
This is accepted Scala-code, but utterly bad style (it is more like
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
  1047
Java). It can be written much clearer as:
272
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
  1048
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
  1049
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
  1050
scala> val cs = ('a' to 'h').toList
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
  1051
scala> for (c <- cs) yield c.capitalize
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1052
val res9: List[Char] = List(A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H)
272
da3d30ae67ec updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 271
diff changeset
  1053
\end{lstlisting}
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1054
271
48e12e7aee6e updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 270
diff changeset
  1055
\subsection*{Results and Side-Effects}
48e12e7aee6e updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 270
diff changeset
  1056
301
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1057
While hopefully all this about maps looks reasonable, there is one
273
b19227660752 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 272
diff changeset
  1058
complication: In the examples above we always wanted to transform one
b19227660752 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 272
diff changeset
  1059
list into another list (e.g.~list of squares), or one set into another
b19227660752 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 272
diff changeset
  1060
set (set of numbers into set of remainders modulo 3). What happens if we
b19227660752 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 272
diff changeset
  1061
just want to print out a list of integers? In these cases the
b19227660752 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 272
diff changeset
  1062
for-comprehensions need to be modified. The reason is that \code{print},
b19227660752 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 272
diff changeset
  1063
you guessed it, does not produce any result, but only produces what is
b19227660752 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 272
diff changeset
  1064
in the functional-programming-lingo called a \emph{side-effect}\ldots it
b19227660752 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 272
diff changeset
  1065
prints something out on the screen. Printing out the list of numbers
b19227660752 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 272
diff changeset
  1066
from 1 to 5 would look as follows
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1067
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1068
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1069
scala> for (n <- (1 to 5).toList) print(n)
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1070
12345
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1071
\end{lstlisting}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1072
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1073
\noindent
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1074
where you need to omit the keyword \code{yield}. You can
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1075
also do more elaborate calculations before printingh such as
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1076
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1077
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1078
scala> for (n <- (1 to 5).toList) {
197
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 195
diff changeset
  1079
  val square = n * n
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 195
diff changeset
  1080
  println(s"$n * $n = $square") 
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1081
}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1082
1 * 1 = 1
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1083
2 * 2 = 4
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1084
3 * 3 = 9
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1085
4 * 4 = 16
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1086
5 * 5 = 25
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1087
\end{lstlisting}%$
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1088
301
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1089
\noindent In this code I use a value assignment (\code{val
197
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 195
diff changeset
  1090
square = ...} ) and also what is called in Scala a
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1091
\emph{string interpolation}, written \code{s"..."}. The latter
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1092
is for printing out formatted strings. It allows me to refer to the
270
b9eaa5cdec4a updated
Christian Urban <christian dot urban at kcl dot ac dot uk>
parents: 269
diff changeset
  1093
integer values \code{n} and \code{square} inside a string.
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1094
This is very convenient for printing out ``things''. 
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1095
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1096
The corresponding map construction for functions with 
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1097
side-effects is in Scala called \code{foreach}. So you 
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1098
could also write
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1099
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1100
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1101
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1102
scala> (1 to 5).toList.foreach(n => print(n))
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1103
12345
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1104
\end{lstlisting}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1105
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1106
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1107
\noindent or even just
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1108
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1109
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1110
scala> (1 to 5).toList.foreach(print)
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1111
12345
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1112
\end{lstlisting}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1113
273
b19227660752 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 272
diff changeset
  1114
\noindent 
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1115
If you want to find out more about maps and functions with
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1116
side-effects, you can ponder about the response Scala gives if
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1117
you replace \code{foreach} by \code{map} in the expression
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1118
above. Scala will still allow \code{map} with side-effect
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1119
functions, but then reacts with a slightly interesting result.
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1120
273
b19227660752 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 272
diff changeset
  1121
\subsection*{Aggregates}
b19227660752 updated
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parents: 272
diff changeset
  1122
b19227660752 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 272
diff changeset
  1123
There is one more usage of for-loops in Java, C/C++ and the like:
b19227660752 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 272
diff changeset
  1124
sometimes you want to \emph{aggregate} something about a list, for
278
0c2481cd8b1c updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 277
diff changeset
  1125
example summing up all its elements. In this case you cannot use maps,
273
b19227660752 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 272
diff changeset
  1126
because maps \emph{transform} one data collection into another data
b19227660752 updated
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parents: 272
diff changeset
  1127
collection. They cannot be used to generate a single integer
278
0c2481cd8b1c updated
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parents: 277
diff changeset
  1128
representing an aggregate. So how is this kind of aggregation done in
0c2481cd8b1c updated
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parents: 277
diff changeset
  1129
Scala? Let us suppose you want to sum up all elements from a list. You
0c2481cd8b1c updated
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parents: 277
diff changeset
  1130
might be tempted to write something like
273
b19227660752 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 272
diff changeset
  1131
b19227660752 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 272
diff changeset
  1132
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
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parents: 272
diff changeset
  1133
var cnt = 0
b19227660752 updated
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parents: 272
diff changeset
  1134
for (n <- (1 to 8).toList) {
b19227660752 updated
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parents: 272
diff changeset
  1135
  cnt += n
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Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 272
diff changeset
  1136
}
b19227660752 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 272
diff changeset
  1137
print(cnt)
b19227660752 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 272
diff changeset
  1138
\end{lstlisting}
b19227660752 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 272
diff changeset
  1139
b19227660752 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 272
diff changeset
  1140
\noindent
277
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
  1141
and indeed this is accepted Scala code and produces the expected result,
273
b19227660752 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 272
diff changeset
  1142
namely \code{36}, \textbf{BUT} this is imperative style and not
301
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1143
permitted in PEP. If you submit this kind of code, you get 0 marks. The
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1144
code uses a \code{var} and therefore violates the immutability property
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1145
I ask for in your code. Sorry!
273
b19227660752 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 272
diff changeset
  1146
b19227660752 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 272
diff changeset
  1147
So how to do that same thing without using a \code{var}? Well there are
b19227660752 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 272
diff changeset
  1148
several ways. One way is to define the following recursive
b19227660752 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 272
diff changeset
  1149
\code{sum}-function:
b19227660752 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 272
diff changeset
  1150
b19227660752 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 272
diff changeset
  1151
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
b19227660752 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 272
diff changeset
  1152
def sum(xs: List[Int]) : Int = 
b19227660752 updated
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parents: 272
diff changeset
  1153
  if (xs.isEmpty) 0 else xs.head + sum(xs.tail)
b19227660752 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 272
diff changeset
  1154
\end{lstlisting}  
b19227660752 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 272
diff changeset
  1155
b19227660752 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 272
diff changeset
  1156
\noindent
b19227660752 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 272
diff changeset
  1157
You can then call \code{sum((1 to 8).toList)} and obtain the same result
278
0c2481cd8b1c updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 277
diff changeset
  1158
without a mutable variable and without a for-loop. Obviously for simple things like
277
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
  1159
sum, you could have written \code{xs.sum} in the first place. But not
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
  1160
all aggregate functions are pre-defined and often you have to write your
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
  1161
own recursive function for this.
273
b19227660752 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 272
diff changeset
  1162
352
97bcf8efe4e0 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 343
diff changeset
  1163
%\subsection*{Always Produce a Result! No Exceptions!}
329
8a34b2ebc8cc updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 312
diff changeset
  1164
%
8a34b2ebc8cc updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 312
diff changeset
  1165
%Function should always produce a value. Exception is not thrown.
8a34b2ebc8cc updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 312
diff changeset
  1166
%Whenever there is a possibility of non-value result (exception, void,
8a34b2ebc8cc updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 312
diff changeset
  1167
%undefined, null, etc.), it should be incorporated in the result type.
8a34b2ebc8cc updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 312
diff changeset
  1168
%Such types include but not limited to
8a34b2ebc8cc updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 312
diff changeset
  1169
%
8a34b2ebc8cc updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 312
diff changeset
  1170
%Option[T]
8a34b2ebc8cc updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 312
diff changeset
  1171
352
97bcf8efe4e0 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 343
diff changeset
  1172
%TBD
334
841727e27252 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 333
diff changeset
  1173
329
8a34b2ebc8cc updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 312
diff changeset
  1174
271
48e12e7aee6e updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 270
diff changeset
  1175
\subsection*{Higher-Order Functions}
48e12e7aee6e updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 270
diff changeset
  1176
301
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1177
Functions obviously play a central role in functional programming. Two simple
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1178
examples are
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1179
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1180
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1181
def even(x: Int) : Boolean = x % 2 == 0
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1182
def odd(x: Int) : Boolean = x % 2 == 1
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1183
\end{lstlisting} 
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1184
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1185
\noindent
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1186
More interestingly, the concept of functions is really pushed to the
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1187
limit in functional programming. Functions can take other functions as
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1188
arguments and can return a function as a result. This is actually
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1189
quite important for making code generic. Assume a list of 10 elements:
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1190
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1191
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1192
val lst = (1 to 10).toList  
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1193
\end{lstlisting} 
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1194
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1195
\noindent 
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1196
Say, we want to filter out all even numbers. For this we can use 
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1197
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1198
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1199
scala> lst.filter(even)
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1200
List(2, 4, 6, 8, 10)
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1201
\end{lstlisting} 
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1202
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1203
\noindent
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1204
where \code{filter} expects a function as argument specifying which
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1205
elements of the list should be kept and which should be left out. By
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1206
allowing \code{filter} to take a function as argument, we can also
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1207
easily filter out odd numbers as well.
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1208
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1209
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1210
scala> lst.filter(odd)
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1211
List(1, 3, 5, 7, 9)
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1212
\end{lstlisting} 
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1213
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1214
\noindent
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1215
Such function arguments are quite frequently used for ``generic'' functions.
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1216
For example it is easy to count odd elements in a list or find the first
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1217
even number in a list:
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1218
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1219
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1220
scala> lst.count(odd)
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1221
5
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1222
scala> lst.find(even)
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1223
Some(2)
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1224
\end{lstlisting} 
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1225
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1226
\noindent
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1227
Recall that the return type of \code{even} and \code{odd} are booleans.
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1228
Such function are sometimes called predicates, because they determine
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1229
what should be true for an element and what false, and then performing
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1230
some operation according to this boolean. Such predicates are quite useful. 
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1231
Say you want to sort the \code{lst}-list in ascending and descending order. 
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1232
For this you can write
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1233
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1234
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1235
lst.sortWith(_ < _)
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1236
lst.sortWith(_ > _)
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1237
\end{lstlisting} 
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1238
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1239
\noindent where \code{sortWith} expects a predicate as argument. The
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1240
construction \code{_ < _} stands for a function that takes two arguments
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1241
and returns true when the first one is smaller than the second. You can
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1242
think of this as elegant shorthand notation for 
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1243
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1244
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1245
def smaller(x: Int, y: Int) : Boolean = x < y
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1246
lst.sortWith(smaller)
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1247
\end{lstlisting} 
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1248
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1249
\noindent
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1250
Say you want to find in \code{lst} the first odd number greater than 2.
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1251
For this you need to write a function that specifies exactly this
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1252
condition. To do this you can use a slight variant of the shorthand
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1253
notation above
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1254
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1255
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1256
scala> lst.find(n => odd(n) && n > 2)
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1257
Some(3)
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1258
\end{lstlisting} 
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1259
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1260
\noindent
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1261
Here \code{n => ...} specifies a function that takes \code{n} as
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1262
argument and uses this argument in whatever comes after the double
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1263
arrow. If you want to use this mechanism for looking for an element that
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1264
is both even and odd, then of course you out of luck.
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1265
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1266
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1267
scala> lst.find(n => odd(n) && even(n))
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1268
None
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1269
\end{lstlisting} 
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1270
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1271
While functions taking functions as arguments seems a rather useful
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1272
feature, the utility of returning a function might not be so clear. 
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1273
I admit the following example is a bit contrived, but believe me
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1274
sometims functions produce other functions in a very meaningful way.
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1275
Say we want to generate functions according to strings, as in
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1276
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1277
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1278
def mkfn(s: String) : (Int => Boolean) =
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1279
  if (s == "even") even else odd
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1280
\end{lstlisting}
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1281
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1282
\noindent
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1283
With this we can generate the required function for \code{filter}
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1284
according to a string:
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1285
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1286
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1287
scala> lst.filter(mkfn("even"))
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1288
List(2, 4, 6, 8, 10)
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1289
scala> lst.filter(mkfn("foo"))
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1290
List(1, 3, 5, 7, 9)
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1291
\end{lstlisting}
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1292
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1293
\noindent
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1294
As said, this is example is a bit contrived---I was not able to think
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1295
of anything simple, but for example in the Compiler module next year I
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1296
show a compilation functions that needs to generate functions as
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1297
intermediate result. Anyway, notice the interesting type we had to
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1298
annotate to \code{mkfn}. The types in Scala are described next.
301
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1299
274
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 273
diff changeset
  1300
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1301
\subsection*{Types}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1302
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1303
In most functional programming languages, types play an
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1304
essential role. Scala is such a language. You have already
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1305
seen built-in types, like \code{Int}, \code{Boolean},
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1306
\code{String} and \code{BigInt}, but also user-defined ones,
195
fc3ac7b70a06 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 193
diff changeset
  1307
like \code{Rexp} (see coursework). Unfortunately, types can be a thorny
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1308
subject, especially in Scala. For example, why do we need to
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1309
give the type to \code{toSet[Int]}, but not to \code{toList}?
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1310
The reason is the power of Scala, which sometimes means it
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1311
cannot infer all necessary typing information. At the
195
fc3ac7b70a06 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 193
diff changeset
  1312
beginning, while getting familiar with Scala, I recommend a
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1313
``play-it-by-ear-approach'' to types. Fully understanding
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1314
type-systems, especially complicated ones like in Scala, can
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1315
take a module on their own.\footnote{Still, such a study can
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1316
be a rewarding training: If you are in the business of
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1317
designing new programming languages, you will not be able to
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1318
turn a blind eye to types. They essentially help programmers
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1319
to avoid common programming errors and help with maintaining
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1320
code.}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1321
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1322
In Scala, types are needed whenever you define an inductive
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1323
datatype and also whenever you define functions (their
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1324
arguments and their results need a type). Base types are types
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1325
that do not take any (type)arguments, for example \code{Int}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1326
and \code{String}. Compound types take one or more arguments,
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1327
which as seen earlier need to be given in angle-brackets, for
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1328
example \code{List[Int]} or \code{Set[List[String]]} or 
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1329
\code{Map[Int, Int]}.
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1330
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1331
Scala provides a basic mechanism to check the type of a (closed)
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1332
expression---closed means that all parts are already known to Scala.
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1333
Then you can use the command \code{:type} and check in the REPL:
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1334
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1335
\begin{lstlisting}[ numbers=none]
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1336
scala> :type (1, List(3), Set(4,5), "hello")
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1337
(Int, List[Int], Set[Int], String)
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1338
\end{lstlisting}
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1339
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1340
\noindent
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1341
If Scala can calculate the type of the given expression, then it
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1342
will print it. Unfortunately, this way of finding out a type is almost
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1343
unusable: for `things' where the type is pretty obvious, it gives an
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1344
answer; but for `things' that are actually of interest (such as
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1345
what is the type of a pre-defined function), it gives up with
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1346
an error message. 
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1347
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1348
There are a few special type-constructors that fall outside
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1349
this pattern. One is for tuples, where the type is written
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1350
with parentheses. For example 
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1351
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1352
\begin{lstlisting}[ numbers=none]
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1353
(Int, Int, String)
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1354
\end{lstlisting}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1355
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1356
\noindent is for a triple (a tuple with three components---two
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1357
integers and a string). Tuples are helpful if you want to
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1358
define functions with multiple results, say the function
270
b9eaa5cdec4a updated
Christian Urban <christian dot urban at kcl dot ac dot uk>
parents: 269
diff changeset
  1359
returning the quotient and remainder of two numbers. For this
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1360
you might define:
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1361
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1362
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1363
\begin{lstlisting}[ numbers=none]
301
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1364
def quo_rem(m: Int, n: Int) : (Int, Int) =
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1365
  (m / n, m % n)
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1366
\end{lstlisting}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1367
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1368
\noindent Since this function returns a pair of integers, its
277
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
  1369
\emph{return type} needs to be of type \code{(Int, Int)}. Incidentally,
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
  1370
this is also the \emph{input type} of this function. For this notice
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
  1371
\code{quo_rem} takes \emph{two} arguments, namely \code{m} and \code{n},
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
  1372
both of which are integers. They are ``packaged'' in a pair.
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
  1373
Consequently the complete type of \code{quo_rem} is
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1374
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1375
\begin{lstlisting}[ numbers=none]
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1376
(Int, Int) => (Int, Int)
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1377
\end{lstlisting}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1378
301
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1379
\noindent
277
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
  1380
This uses another special type-constructor, written as the arrow
301
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1381
\code{=>}. This is sometimes also called \emph{function arrow}.  For
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1382
example, the type \code{Int => String} is for a function that takes an
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1383
integer as input argument and produces a string as result.  A function
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1384
of this type is for instance
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1385
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1386
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1387
def mk_string(n: Int) : String = n match {
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1388
  case 0 => "zero"
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1389
  case 1 => "one"
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1390
  case 2 => "two"
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1391
  case _ => "many" 
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1392
} 
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1393
\end{lstlisting}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1394
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1395
\noindent It takes an integer as input argument and returns a
301
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1396
string. The type of the function generated in \code{mkfn} above, is
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1397
\code{Int => Boolean}.
277
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
  1398
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
  1399
Unfortunately, unlike other functional programming languages, there is
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
  1400
in Scala no easy way to find out the types of existing functions, except
acaf2099406a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 275
diff changeset
  1401
by looking into the documentation
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1402
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1403
\begin{quote}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1404
\url{http://www.scala-lang.org/api/current/}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1405
\end{quote}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1406
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1407
The function arrow can also be iterated, as in 
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1408
\code{Int => String => Boolean}. This is the type for a function
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1409
taking an integer as first argument and a string as second,
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1410
and the result of the function is a boolean. Though silly, a
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1411
function of this type would be
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1412
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1413
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1414
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1415
def chk_string(n: Int)(s: String) : Boolean = 
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1416
  mk_string(n) == s
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1417
\end{lstlisting}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1418
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1419
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1420
\noindent which checks whether the integer \code{n}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1421
corresponds to the name \code{s} given by the function
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1422
\code{mk\_string}. Notice the unusual way of specifying the
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1423
arguments of this function: the arguments are given one after
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1424
the other, instead of being in a pair (what would be the type
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1425
of this function then?). This way of specifying the arguments
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1426
can be useful, for example in situations like this
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1427
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1428
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1429
scala> List("one", "two", "three", "many").map(chk_string(2))
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1430
res4 = List(false, true, false, false)
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1431
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1432
scala> List("one", "two", "three", "many").map(chk_string(3))
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1433
res5 = List(false, false, false, true)
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1434
\end{lstlisting}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1435
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1436
\noindent In each case we can give to \code{map} a specialised
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1437
version of \code{chk_string}---once specialised to 2 and once
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1438
to 3. This kind of ``specialising'' a function is called
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1439
\emph{partial application}---we have not yet given to this
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1440
function all arguments it needs, but only some of them.
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1441
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1442
Coming back to the type \code{Int => String => Boolean}. The
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1443
rule about such function types is that the right-most type
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1444
specifies what the function returns (a boolean in this case).
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1445
The types before that specify how many arguments the function
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1446
expects and what their type is (in this case two arguments,
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1447
one of type \code{Int} and another of type \code{String}).
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1448
Given this rule, what kind of function has type
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1449
\mbox{\code{(Int => String) => Boolean}}? Well, it returns a
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1450
boolean. More interestingly, though, it only takes a single
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1451
argument (because of the parentheses). The single argument
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1452
happens to be another function (taking an integer as input and
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1453
returning a string). Remember that \code{mk_string} is just 
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1454
such a function. So how can we use it? For this define
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1455
the somewhat silly function \code{apply_3}:
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1456
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1457
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1458
def apply_3(f: Int => String): Bool = f(3) == "many"
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1459
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1460
scala> apply_3(mk_string)
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1461
res6 = true
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1462
\end{lstlisting}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1463
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1464
You might ask: Apart from silly functions like above, what is
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1465
the point of having functions as input arguments to other
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1466
functions?
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1467
%In Java there is indeed no need of this kind of
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1468
%feature: at least in the past it did not allow such
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1469
%constructions. I think, the point of Java 8 and successors was to lift this
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1470
%restriction.
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1471
Well, in all functional programming languages,
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1472
including Scala, it is really essential to allow functions as
301
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1473
input argument. Above you have already seen \code{map} and
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1474
\code{foreach} which need this feature. Consider the functions
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1475
\code{print} and \code{println}, which both print out strings,
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1476
but the latter adds a line break. You can call \code{foreach}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1477
with either of them and thus changing how, for example, five
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1478
numbers are printed.
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1479
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1480
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1481
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1482
scala> (1 to 5).toList.foreach(print)
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1483
12345
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1484
scala> (1 to 5).toList.foreach(println)
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1485
1
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1486
2
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1487
3
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1488
4
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1489
5
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1490
\end{lstlisting}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1491
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1492
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1493
\noindent This is actually one of the main design principles
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1494
in functional programming. You have generic functions like
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1495
\code{map} and \code{foreach} that can traverse data containers,
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1496
like lists or sets. They then take a function to specify what
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1497
should be done with each element during the traversal. This
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1498
requires that the generic traversal functions can cope with
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1499
any kind of function (not just functions that, for example,
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1500
take as input an integer and produce a string like above).
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1501
This means we cannot fix the type of the generic traversal
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1502
functions, but have to keep them
181
31ba76ce016d updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 180
diff changeset
  1503
\emph{polymorphic}.\footnote{Another interesting topic about
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1504
types, but we omit it here for the sake of brevity.} 
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1505
301
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1506
There is one more type constructor that is rather special. It is
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1507
called \code{Unit}. Recall that \code{Boolean} has two values, namely
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1508
\code{true} and \code{false}. This can be used, for example, to test
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1509
something and decide whether the test succeeds or not. In contrast the
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1510
type \code{Unit} has only a single value, written \code{()}. This
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1511
seems like a completely useless type and return value for a function,
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1512
but is actually quite useful. It indicates when the function does not
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1513
return any result. The purpose of these functions is to cause
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1514
something being written on the screen or written into a file, for
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1515
example. This is what is called they cause a \emph{side-effect}, for
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1516
example new content displayed on the screen or some new data in a
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1517
file. Scala uses the \code{Unit} type to indicate that a function does
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1518
not have a result, but potentially causes a side-effect. Typical
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1519
examples are the printing functions, like \code{print}.
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1520
301
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1521
c3b33c709696 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 278
diff changeset
  1522
%%\subsection*{User-Defined Types}
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1523
143
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1524
% \subsection*{Cool Stuff}
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1525
143
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1526
% The first wow-moment I had with Scala was when I came across
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1527
% the following code-snippet for reading a web-page. 
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1528
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1529
143
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1530
% \begin{lstlisting}[ numbers=none]
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1531
% import io.Source
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1532
% val url = """http://www.inf.kcl.ac.uk/staff/urbanc/"""
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1533
% Source.fromURL(url)("ISO-8859-1").take(10000).mkString
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1534
% \end{lstlisting}
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1535
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1536
143
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1537
% \noindent These three lines return a string containing the
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1538
% HTML-code of my webpage. It actually already does something
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1539
% more sophisticated, namely only returns the first 10000
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1540
% characters of a webpage in case it is too large. Why is that
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1541
% code-snippet of any interest? Well, try implementing
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1542
% reading-from-a-webpage in Java. I also like the possibility of
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1543
% triple-quoting strings, which I have only seen in Scala so
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1544
% far. The idea behind this is that in such a string all
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1545
% characters are interpreted literally---there are no escaped
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1546
% characters, like \verb|\n| for newlines.
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1547
143
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1548
% My second wow-moment I had with a feature of Scala that other
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1549
% functional programming languages do not have. This feature is
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1550
% about implicit type conversions. If you have regular
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1551
% expressions and want to use them for language processing you
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1552
% often want to recognise keywords in a language, for example
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1553
% \code{for},{} \code{if},{} \code{yield} and so on. But the
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1554
% basic regular expression \code{CHAR} can only recognise a
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1555
% single character. In order to recognise a whole string, like
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1556
% \code{for}, you have to put many of those together using
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1557
% \code{SEQ}:
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1558
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1559
143
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1560
% \begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1561
% SEQ(CHAR('f'), SEQ(CHAR('o'), CHAR('r')))
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1562
% \end{lstlisting}
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1563
143
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1564
% \noindent This gets quickly unreadable when the strings and
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1565
% regular expressions get more complicated. In other functional
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1566
% programming languages, you can explicitly write a conversion
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1567
% function that takes a string, say \dq{\pcode{for}}, and
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1568
% generates the regular expression above. But then your code is
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1569
% littered with such conversion functions.
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1570
143
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1571
% In Scala you can do better by ``hiding'' the conversion
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1572
% functions. The keyword for doing this is \code{implicit} and
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1573
% it needs a built-in library called 
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1574
143
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1575
% \begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1576
% scala.language.implicitConversions
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1577
% \end{lstlisting}
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1578
143
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1579
% \noindent
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1580
% Consider the code
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1581
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1582
143
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1583
% \begin{lstlisting}[language=Scala]
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1584
% import scala.language.implicitConversions
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1585
143
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1586
% def charlist2rexp(s: List[Char]) : Rexp = s match {
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1587
%   case Nil => EMPTY
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1588
%   case c::Nil => CHAR(c)
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1589
%   case c::s => SEQ(CHAR(c), charlist2rexp(s))
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1590
% }
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1591
143
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1592
% implicit def string2rexp(s: String) : Rexp = 
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1593
%   charlist2rexp(s.toList)
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1594
% \end{lstlisting}
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1595
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1596
143
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1597
% \noindent where the first seven lines implement a function
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1598
% that given a list of characters generates the corresponding
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1599
% regular expression. In Lines 9 and 10, this function is used
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1600
% for transforming a string into a regular expression. Since the
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1601
% \code{string2rexp}-function is declared as \code{implicit},
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1602
% the effect will be that whenever Scala expects a regular
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1603
% expression, but I only give it a string, it will automatically
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1604
% insert a call to the \code{string2rexp}-function. I can now
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1605
% write for example
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1606
143
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1607
% \begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1608
% scala> ALT("ab", "ac")
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1609
% res9 = ALT(SEQ(CHAR(a),CHAR(b)),SEQ(CHAR(a),CHAR(c)))
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1610
% \end{lstlisting}
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1611
143
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1612
% \noindent Recall that \code{ALT} expects two regular
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1613
% expressions as arguments, but I only supply two strings. The
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1614
% implicit conversion function will transform the string into a
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1615
% regular expression.
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1616
143
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1617
% Using implicit definitions, Scala allows me to introduce
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1618
% some further syntactic sugar for regular expressions:
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1619
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1620
143
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1621
% \begin{lstlisting}[ numbers=none]
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1622
% implicit def RexpOps(r: Rexp) = new {
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1623
%   def | (s: Rexp) = ALT(r, s)
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1624
%   def ~ (s: Rexp) = SEQ(r, s)
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1625
%   def % = STAR(r)
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1626
% }
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1627
143
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1628
% implicit def stringOps(s: String) = new {
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1629
%   def | (r: Rexp) = ALT(s, r)
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1630
%   def | (r: String) = ALT(s, r)
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1631
%   def ~ (r: Rexp) = SEQ(s, r)
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1632
%   def ~ (r: String) = SEQ(s, r)
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1633
%   def % = STAR(s)
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1634
% }
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1635
% \end{lstlisting}
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1636
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1637
 
143
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1638
% \noindent This might seem a bit overly complicated, but its effect is
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1639
% that I can now write regular expressions such as $ab + ac$ 
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1640
% simply as
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1641
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1642
143
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1643
% \begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1644
% scala> "ab" | "ac"
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1645
% res10 = ALT(SEQ(CHAR(a),CHAR(b)),SEQ(CHAR(a),CHAR(c)))
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1646
% \end{lstlisting}
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1647
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1648
 
143
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1649
% \noindent I leave you to figure out what the other
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1650
% syntactic sugar in the code above stands for.
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1651
 
143
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1652
% One more useful feature of Scala is the ability to define
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1653
% functions with varying argument lists. This is a feature that
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1654
% is already present in old languages, like C, but seems to have
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1655
% been forgotten in the meantime---Java does not have it. In the
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1656
% context of regular expressions this feature comes in handy:
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1657
% Say you are fed up with writing many alternatives as
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1658
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1659
143
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1660
% \begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1661
% ALT(..., ALT(..., ALT(..., ...)))
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1662
% \end{lstlisting}
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1663
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1664
143
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1665
% \noindent To make it difficult, you do not know how deep such
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1666
% alternatives are nested. So you need something flexible that
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1667
% can take as many alternatives as needed. In Scala one can
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1668
% achieve this by adding a \code{*} to the type of an argument.
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1669
% Consider the code
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1670
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1671
143
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1672
% \begin{lstlisting}[language=Scala]
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1673
% def Alts(rs: List[Rexp]) : Rexp = rs match {
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1674
%   case Nil => NULL
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1675
%   case r::Nil => r
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1676
%   case r::rs => ALT(r, Alts(rs))
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1677
% }
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1678
143
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1679
% def ALTS(rs: Rexp*) = Alts(rs.toList)
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1680
% \end{lstlisting}
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1681
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1682
143
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1683
% \noindent The function in Lines 1 to 5 takes a list of regular
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1684
% expressions and converts it into an appropriate alternative
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1685
% regular expression. In Line 7 there is a wrapper for this
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1686
% function which uses the feature of varying argument lists. The
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1687
% effect of this code  is that I can write the regular
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1688
% expression for keywords as
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1689
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1690
143
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1691
% \begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1692
% ALTS("for", "def", "yield", "implicit", "if", "match", "case")
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1693
% \end{lstlisting}
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1694
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1695
143
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1696
% \noindent Again I leave it to you to find out how much this
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1697
% simplifies the regular expression in comparison with if I had
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1698
% to write this by hand using only the ``plain'' regular
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1699
% expressions from the inductive datatype.
11396c17cd8b updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 125
diff changeset
  1700
197
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 195
diff changeset
  1701
%\bigskip\noindent
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 195
diff changeset
  1702
%\textit{More TBD.}
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1703
197
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 195
diff changeset
  1704
%\subsection*{Coursework}
181
31ba76ce016d updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 180
diff changeset
  1705
395
017f621f5835 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 352
diff changeset
  1706
\begin{figure}[p]
017f621f5835 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 352
diff changeset
  1707
\begin{boxedminipage}{\textwidth}  
017f621f5835 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 352
diff changeset
  1708
\textbf{Scala Syntax for Java Developers}\bigskip
195
fc3ac7b70a06 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 193
diff changeset
  1709
395
017f621f5835 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 352
diff changeset
  1710
\noindent
343
c8fcc0e0a57f updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 335
diff changeset
  1711
Scala compiles to the JVM, like the Java language. Because of this,
352
97bcf8efe4e0 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 343
diff changeset
  1712
it can re-use many libraries. Here are a few hints how some Java code
97bcf8efe4e0 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 343
diff changeset
  1713
tranlsates to Scala code:\bigskip
343
c8fcc0e0a57f updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 335
diff changeset
  1714
352
97bcf8efe4e0 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 343
diff changeset
  1715
\noindent
97bcf8efe4e0 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 343
diff changeset
  1716
Variable declaration:
343
c8fcc0e0a57f updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 335
diff changeset
  1717
\begin{lstlisting}[language=Java]
352
97bcf8efe4e0 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 343
diff changeset
  1718
Drink coke = getCoke();/*!\annotation{Java}!*/
343
c8fcc0e0a57f updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 335
diff changeset
  1719
\end{lstlisting}
c8fcc0e0a57f updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 335
diff changeset
  1720
c8fcc0e0a57f updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 335
diff changeset
  1721
\begin{lstlisting}[language=Scala]
352
97bcf8efe4e0 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 343
diff changeset
  1722
val coke : Drink = getCoke()/*!\annotation{Scala}!*/
343
c8fcc0e0a57f updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 335
diff changeset
  1723
\end{lstlisting}
c8fcc0e0a57f updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 335
diff changeset
  1724
352
97bcf8efe4e0 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 343
diff changeset
  1725
\noindent
395
017f621f5835 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 352
diff changeset
  1726
or even
017f621f5835 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 352
diff changeset
  1727
017f621f5835 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 352
diff changeset
  1728
\begin{lstlisting}[language=Scala]
017f621f5835 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 352
diff changeset
  1729
val coke = getCoke()/*!\annotation{Scala}!*/
017f621f5835 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 352
diff changeset
  1730
\end{lstlisting}\bigskip
017f621f5835 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 352
diff changeset
  1731
017f621f5835 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 352
diff changeset
  1732
\noindent
343
c8fcc0e0a57f updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 335
diff changeset
  1733
Unit means void:
c8fcc0e0a57f updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 335
diff changeset
  1734
c8fcc0e0a57f updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 335
diff changeset
  1735
\begin{lstlisting}[language=Java]
352
97bcf8efe4e0 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 343
diff changeset
  1736
public void output(String s) {/*!\annotation{Java}!*/
343
c8fcc0e0a57f updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 335
diff changeset
  1737
  System.out.println(s);
c8fcc0e0a57f updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 335
diff changeset
  1738
}
c8fcc0e0a57f updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 335
diff changeset
  1739
\end{lstlisting}
c8fcc0e0a57f updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 335
diff changeset
  1740
c8fcc0e0a57f updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 335
diff changeset
  1741
\begin{lstlisting}[language=Scala]
352
97bcf8efe4e0 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 343
diff changeset
  1742
def output(s: String): Unit = println(s)/*!\annotation{Scala}!*/
395
017f621f5835 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 352
diff changeset
  1743
\end{lstlisting}\bigskip
343
c8fcc0e0a57f updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 335
diff changeset
  1744
352
97bcf8efe4e0 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 343
diff changeset
  1745
\noindent
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1746
Compound types, say the type for list of Strings:
343
c8fcc0e0a57f updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 335
diff changeset
  1747
c8fcc0e0a57f updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 335
diff changeset
  1748
\begin{lstlisting}[language=Java]
352
97bcf8efe4e0 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 343
diff changeset
  1749
List<String>/*!\annotation{Java}!*/
343
c8fcc0e0a57f updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 335
diff changeset
  1750
\end{lstlisting}
c8fcc0e0a57f updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 335
diff changeset
  1751
c8fcc0e0a57f updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 335
diff changeset
  1752
\begin{lstlisting}[language=Scala]
352
97bcf8efe4e0 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 343
diff changeset
  1753
List[String]/*!\annotation{Scala}!*/
395
017f621f5835 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 352
diff changeset
  1754
\end{lstlisting}\bigskip
343
c8fcc0e0a57f updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 335
diff changeset
  1755
352
97bcf8efe4e0 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 343
diff changeset
  1756
\noindent
343
c8fcc0e0a57f updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 335
diff changeset
  1757
String interpolations
c8fcc0e0a57f updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 335
diff changeset
  1758
c8fcc0e0a57f updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 335
diff changeset
  1759
\begin{lstlisting}[language=Java]
352
97bcf8efe4e0 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 343
diff changeset
  1760
System.out.println("Hello, "+ first + " "+ last + "!");
97bcf8efe4e0 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 343
diff changeset
  1761
/*!\annotation{Java}!*/
343
c8fcc0e0a57f updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 335
diff changeset
  1762
\end{lstlisting}
c8fcc0e0a57f updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 335
diff changeset
  1763
c8fcc0e0a57f updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 335
diff changeset
  1764
\begin{lstlisting}[language=Scala]
352
97bcf8efe4e0 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 343
diff changeset
  1765
println(s"Hello, $first $last!")/*!\annotation{Scala}!*/
395
017f621f5835 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 352
diff changeset
  1766
\end{lstlisting}\bigskip
343
c8fcc0e0a57f updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 335
diff changeset
  1767
352
97bcf8efe4e0 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 343
diff changeset
  1768
\noindent
395
017f621f5835 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 352
diff changeset
  1769
Java provides some syntactic sugar when constructing anonymous functions:
343
c8fcc0e0a57f updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 335
diff changeset
  1770
c8fcc0e0a57f updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 335
diff changeset
  1771
\begin{lstlisting}[language=Java]
c8fcc0e0a57f updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 335
diff changeset
  1772
list.foreach(item -> System.out.println("* " + item));
352
97bcf8efe4e0 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 343
diff changeset
  1773
/*!\annotation{Java}!*/
343
c8fcc0e0a57f updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 335
diff changeset
  1774
\end{lstlisting}
c8fcc0e0a57f updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 335
diff changeset
  1775
352
97bcf8efe4e0 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 343
diff changeset
  1776
\noindent
441
3bfe81972674 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 426
diff changeset
  1777
In Scala, we use the \code{=>} symbol for the same:
343
c8fcc0e0a57f updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 335
diff changeset
  1778
c8fcc0e0a57f updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 335
diff changeset
  1779
\begin{lstlisting}[language=Scala]
352
97bcf8efe4e0 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 343
diff changeset
  1780
list.foreach(item => println(s"* $item"))/*!\annotation{Scala}!*/
97bcf8efe4e0 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 343
diff changeset
  1781
\end{lstlisting}%$
395
017f621f5835 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 352
diff changeset
  1782
\end{boxedminipage}
017f621f5835 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 352
diff changeset
  1783
\end{figure}
343
c8fcc0e0a57f updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 335
diff changeset
  1784
352
97bcf8efe4e0 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 343
diff changeset
  1785
%%new / vs case classes
343
c8fcc0e0a57f updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 335
diff changeset
  1786
195
fc3ac7b70a06 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 193
diff changeset
  1787
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1788
\subsection*{More Info}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1789
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1790
There is much more to Scala than I can possibly describe in
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1791
this short document and teach in the lectures. Fortunately there are a 
197
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 195
diff changeset
  1792
number of free books
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1793
about Scala and of course lots of help online. For example
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1794
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1795
\begin{itemize}
400
e48ea8300b2d updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 395
diff changeset
  1796
%%\item \url{http://www.scala-lang.org/docu/files/ScalaByExample.pdf}
e48ea8300b2d updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 395
diff changeset
  1797
%%\item \url{http://www.scala-lang.org/docu/files/ScalaTutorial.pdf}
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1798
\item \url{https://www.youtube.com/user/ShadowofCatron}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1799
\item \url{http://docs.scala-lang.org/tutorials}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1800
\item \url{https://www.scala-exercises.org}
188
937c995b047a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 187
diff changeset
  1801
\item \url{https://twitter.github.io/scala_school}
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1802
\end{itemize}
188
937c995b047a updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 187
diff changeset
  1803
 
197
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 195
diff changeset
  1804
\noindent There is also an online course at Coursera on Functional
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1805
Programming Principles in Scala by Martin Odersky, the main
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1806
developer of the Scala language. And a document that explains
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1807
Scala for Java programmers
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1808
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1809
\begin{itemize}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1810
\item \small\url{http://docs.scala-lang.org/tutorials/scala-for-java-programmers.html}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1811
\end{itemize}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1812
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1813
While I am quite enthusiastic about Scala, I am also happy to
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1814
admit that it has more than its fair share of faults.
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1815
%The
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1816
%problem seen earlier of having to give an explicit type to
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1817
%\code{toSet}, but not \code{toList} is one of them. There are
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1818
%also many ``deep'' ideas about types in Scala, which even to
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1819
%me as seasoned functional programmer are puzzling.
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1820
For example, whilst
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1821
implicits are great, they can also be a source of great
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1822
headaches, for example consider the code:
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1823
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1824
\begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1825
scala>  List (1, 2, 3) contains "your mom"
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1826
res1: Boolean = false
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1827
\end{lstlisting}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1828
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1829
\noindent Rather than returning \code{false}, this code should
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1830
throw a typing-error. There are also many limitations Scala
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1831
inherited from the JVM that can be really annoying. For
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1832
example a fixed stack size. One can work around this
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1833
particular limitation, but why does one have to?
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1834
More such `puzzles' can be found at
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1835
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1836
\begin{center}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1837
  \url{http://scalapuzzlers.com} and
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1838
  \url{http://latkin.org/blog/2017/05/02/when-the-scala-compiler-doesnt-help/}
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1839
\end{center}
191
f78b18c4c886 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 190
diff changeset
  1840
     
f78b18c4c886 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 190
diff changeset
  1841
Even if Scala has been a success in several high-profile companies,
f78b18c4c886 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 190
diff changeset
  1842
there is also a company (Yammer) that first used Scala in their
f78b18c4c886 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 190
diff changeset
  1843
production code, but then moved away from it. Allegedly they did not
f78b18c4c886 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 190
diff changeset
  1844
like the steep learning curve of Scala and also that new versions of
f78b18c4c886 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 190
diff changeset
  1845
Scala often introduced incompatibilities in old code. Also the Java
197
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 195
diff changeset
  1846
language is lately developing at lightening speed (in comparison to the past) 
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 195
diff changeset
  1847
taking on many
441
3bfe81972674 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 426
diff changeset
  1848
features of Scala and other languages, and it seems it even introduces
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1849
new features on its own. So there is seemingly even more incentive to
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1850
stick with the old stuff you know.
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1851
333
24bc76d97db2 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 329
diff changeset
  1852
24bc76d97db2 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 329
diff changeset
  1853
Scala is deep: After many years, I still continue to learn new technique
470
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1854
for writing more elegant code.
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1855
%Unfortunately, I have not yet managed to
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1856
%switch over my code to Scala 3.0 due to time constraints.
86a456f8cb92 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 442
diff changeset
  1857
Scala 3 seems
441
3bfe81972674 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 426
diff changeset
  1858
to iron out a number of snags from Scala 2, but why on earth are they
442
c86e7dd198bf updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 441
diff changeset
  1859
introducing Python-esque indentation and why on earth are they
441
3bfe81972674 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 426
diff changeset
  1860
re-introducing the \texttt{then}-keyword in Scala 3, when I just about got
3bfe81972674 updated
Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk>
parents: 426
diff changeset
  1861
comfortable without it? 
333
24bc76d97db2 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 329
diff changeset
  1862
152
114a89518aea updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 143
diff changeset
  1863
%So all in all, Scala might not be a great teaching language,
114a89518aea updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 143
diff changeset
  1864
%but I hope this is mitigated by the fact that I never require
114a89518aea updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 143
diff changeset
  1865
%you to write any Scala code. You only need to be able to read
114a89518aea updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 143
diff changeset
  1866
%it. In the coursework you can use any programming language you
114a89518aea updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 143
diff changeset
  1867
%like. If you want to use Scala for this, then be my guest; if
114a89518aea updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 143
diff changeset
  1868
%you do not want, stick with the language you are most familiar
114a89518aea updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 143
diff changeset
  1869
%with.
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1870
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1871
191
f78b18c4c886 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 190
diff changeset
  1872
\subsection*{Conclusion}
f78b18c4c886 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 190
diff changeset
  1873
198
d59c7995bcb2 updated handout
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 197
diff changeset
  1874
I hope you liked the short journey through the Scala language---but remember we 
197
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 195
diff changeset
  1875
like you to take on board the functional programming point of view,
198
d59c7995bcb2 updated handout
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 197
diff changeset
  1876
rather than just learning another language. There is an interesting
d59c7995bcb2 updated handout
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 197
diff changeset
  1877
blog article about Scala by a convert:
d59c7995bcb2 updated handout
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 197
diff changeset
  1878
d59c7995bcb2 updated handout
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 197
diff changeset
  1879
\begin{center}
d59c7995bcb2 updated handout
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 197
diff changeset
  1880
\url{https://www.skedulo.com/tech-blog/technology-scala-programming/}
d59c7995bcb2 updated handout
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 197
diff changeset
  1881
\end{center}  
d59c7995bcb2 updated handout
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 197
diff changeset
  1882
d59c7995bcb2 updated handout
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 197
diff changeset
  1883
\noindent
d59c7995bcb2 updated handout
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 197
diff changeset
  1884
He makes pretty much the same arguments about functional programming and
d59c7995bcb2 updated handout
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 197
diff changeset
  1885
immutability (one section is teasingly called \textit{``Where Did all
d59c7995bcb2 updated handout
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 197
diff changeset
  1886
the Bugs Go?''}). If you happen to moan about all the idiotic features
d59c7995bcb2 updated handout
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 197
diff changeset
  1887
of Scala, well, I guess this is part of the package according to this
d59c7995bcb2 updated handout
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 197
diff changeset
  1888
quote:\bigskip
197
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 195
diff changeset
  1889
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 195
diff changeset
  1890
%\begin{itemize}
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 195
diff changeset
  1891
%\item no exceptions....there two kinds, one ``global'' exceptions, like
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 195
diff changeset
  1892
%out of memory (not much can be done about this by the ``individual''
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 195
diff changeset
  1893
%programmer); and ``local one'' open a file that might not exists - in
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 195
diff changeset
  1894
%the latter you do not want to use exceptions, but Options
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 195
diff changeset
  1895
%\end{itemize}
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
diff changeset
  1896
182
d3d912d7e17f updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 181
diff changeset
  1897
\begin{flushright}\it
d3d912d7e17f updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 181
diff changeset
  1898
There are only two kinds of languages: the ones people complain 
d3d912d7e17f updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 181
diff changeset
  1899
about\\ and the ones nobody uses.\smallskip\\
d3d912d7e17f updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 181
diff changeset
  1900
\mbox{}\hfill\small{}---Bjarne Stroustrup (the inventor of C++)
d3d912d7e17f updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 181
diff changeset
  1901
\end{flushright}
d3d912d7e17f updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents: 181
diff changeset
  1902
123
556cd74cbba9 updated
Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de>
parents:
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