- •Contents
- •List of Figures
- •List of Tables
- •List of Listings
- •Foreword
- •Foreword to the First Edition
- •Acknowledgments
- •Introduction
- •A Scalable Language
- •A language that grows on you
- •What makes Scala scalable?
- •Why Scala?
- •Conclusion
- •First Steps in Scala
- •Conclusion
- •Next Steps in Scala
- •Conclusion
- •Classes and Objects
- •Semicolon inference
- •Singleton objects
- •A Scala application
- •Conclusion
- •Basic Types and Operations
- •Some basic types
- •Literals
- •Operators are methods
- •Arithmetic operations
- •Relational and logical operations
- •Bitwise operations
- •Object equality
- •Operator precedence and associativity
- •Rich wrappers
- •Conclusion
- •Functional Objects
- •Checking preconditions
- •Self references
- •Auxiliary constructors
- •Method overloading
- •Implicit conversions
- •A word of caution
- •Conclusion
- •Built-in Control Structures
- •If expressions
- •While loops
- •For expressions
- •Match expressions
- •Variable scope
- •Conclusion
- •Functions and Closures
- •Methods
- •Local functions
- •Short forms of function literals
- •Placeholder syntax
- •Partially applied functions
- •Closures
- •Special function call forms
- •Tail recursion
- •Conclusion
- •Control Abstraction
- •Reducing code duplication
- •Simplifying client code
- •Currying
- •Writing new control structures
- •Conclusion
- •Composition and Inheritance
- •A two-dimensional layout library
- •Abstract classes
- •Extending classes
- •Invoking superclass constructors
- •Polymorphism and dynamic binding
- •Using composition and inheritance
- •Heighten and widen
- •Putting it all together
- •Conclusion
- •How primitives are implemented
- •Bottom types
- •Conclusion
- •Traits
- •How traits work
- •Thin versus rich interfaces
- •Example: Rectangular objects
- •The Ordered trait
- •Why not multiple inheritance?
- •To trait, or not to trait?
- •Conclusion
- •Packages and Imports
- •Putting code in packages
- •Concise access to related code
- •Imports
- •Implicit imports
- •Package objects
- •Conclusion
- •Assertions and Unit Testing
- •Assertions
- •Unit testing in Scala
- •Informative failure reports
- •Using JUnit and TestNG
- •Property-based testing
- •Organizing and running tests
- •Conclusion
- •Case Classes and Pattern Matching
- •A simple example
- •Kinds of patterns
- •Pattern guards
- •Pattern overlaps
- •Sealed classes
- •The Option type
- •Patterns everywhere
- •A larger example
- •Conclusion
- •Working with Lists
- •List literals
- •The List type
- •Constructing lists
- •Basic operations on lists
- •List patterns
- •First-order methods on class List
- •Methods of the List object
- •Processing multiple lists together
- •Conclusion
- •Collections
- •Sequences
- •Sets and maps
- •Selecting mutable versus immutable collections
- •Initializing collections
- •Tuples
- •Conclusion
- •Stateful Objects
- •What makes an object stateful?
- •Reassignable variables and properties
- •Case study: Discrete event simulation
- •A language for digital circuits
- •The Simulation API
- •Circuit Simulation
- •Conclusion
- •Type Parameterization
- •Functional queues
- •Information hiding
- •Variance annotations
- •Checking variance annotations
- •Lower bounds
- •Contravariance
- •Object private data
- •Upper bounds
- •Conclusion
- •Abstract Members
- •A quick tour of abstract members
- •Type members
- •Abstract vals
- •Abstract vars
- •Initializing abstract vals
- •Abstract types
- •Path-dependent types
- •Structural subtyping
- •Enumerations
- •Case study: Currencies
- •Conclusion
- •Implicit Conversions and Parameters
- •Implicit conversions
- •Rules for implicits
- •Implicit conversion to an expected type
- •Converting the receiver
- •Implicit parameters
- •View bounds
- •When multiple conversions apply
- •Debugging implicits
- •Conclusion
- •Implementing Lists
- •The List class in principle
- •The ListBuffer class
- •The List class in practice
- •Functional on the outside
- •Conclusion
- •For Expressions Revisited
- •For expressions
- •The n-queens problem
- •Querying with for expressions
- •Translation of for expressions
- •Going the other way
- •Conclusion
- •The Scala Collections API
- •Mutable and immutable collections
- •Collections consistency
- •Trait Traversable
- •Trait Iterable
- •Sets
- •Maps
- •Synchronized sets and maps
- •Concrete immutable collection classes
- •Concrete mutable collection classes
- •Arrays
- •Strings
- •Performance characteristics
- •Equality
- •Views
- •Iterators
- •Creating collections from scratch
- •Conversions between Java and Scala collections
- •Migrating from Scala 2.7
- •Conclusion
- •The Architecture of Scala Collections
- •Builders
- •Factoring out common operations
- •Integrating new collections
- •Conclusion
- •Extractors
- •An example: extracting email addresses
- •Extractors
- •Patterns with zero or one variables
- •Variable argument extractors
- •Extractors and sequence patterns
- •Extractors versus case classes
- •Regular expressions
- •Conclusion
- •Annotations
- •Why have annotations?
- •Syntax of annotations
- •Standard annotations
- •Conclusion
- •Working with XML
- •Semi-structured data
- •XML overview
- •XML literals
- •Serialization
- •Taking XML apart
- •Deserialization
- •Loading and saving
- •Pattern matching on XML
- •Conclusion
- •Modular Programming Using Objects
- •The problem
- •A recipe application
- •Abstraction
- •Splitting modules into traits
- •Runtime linking
- •Tracking module instances
- •Conclusion
- •Object Equality
- •Equality in Scala
- •Writing an equality method
- •Recipes for equals and hashCode
- •Conclusion
- •Combining Scala and Java
- •Using Scala from Java
- •Annotations
- •Existential types
- •Using synchronized
- •Compiling Scala and Java together
- •Conclusion
- •Actors and Concurrency
- •Trouble in paradise
- •Actors and message passing
- •Treating native threads as actors
- •Better performance through thread reuse
- •Good actors style
- •A longer example: Parallel discrete event simulation
- •Conclusion
- •Combinator Parsing
- •Example: Arithmetic expressions
- •Running your parser
- •Basic regular expression parsers
- •Another example: JSON
- •Parser output
- •Implementing combinator parsers
- •String literals and regular expressions
- •Lexing and parsing
- •Error reporting
- •Backtracking versus LL(1)
- •Conclusion
- •GUI Programming
- •Panels and layouts
- •Handling events
- •Example: Celsius/Fahrenheit converter
- •Conclusion
- •The SCells Spreadsheet
- •The visual framework
- •Disconnecting data entry and display
- •Formulas
- •Parsing formulas
- •Evaluation
- •Operation libraries
- •Change propagation
- •Conclusion
- •Scala Scripts on Unix and Windows
- •Glossary
- •Bibliography
- •About the Authors
- •Index
Section 35.8 |
Chapter 35 · The SCells Spreadsheet |
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35.8 Conclusion
The spreadsheet developed in this chapter is fully functional, even though at some points it adopts the simplest solution to implement rather than the most convenient one for the user. That way, it could be written in just under 200 lines of code. Nevertheless, the architecture of the spreadsheet makes modifications and extensions easy. In case you would like to experiment with the code a bit further, here are some suggestions of what you could change or add:
1.You could make the spreadsheet resizable, so that the number of rows and columns can be changed interactively.
2.You could add new kinds of formulas, for instance binary operations, or other functions.
3.You might think about what to do when cells refer recursively to themselves. For instance, if cell A1 holds the formula add(B1, 1) and cell B1 holds the formula mul(A1, 2), a re-evaluation of either cell will
trigger a stack-overflow. Clearly, that’s not a very good solution. As alternatives, you could either disallow such a situation, or just compute one iteration each time one of the cells is touched.
4.You could enhance error handling, giving more detailed messages describing what went wrong.
5.You could add a formula entry field at the top of the spreadsheet, so that long formulas could be entered more conveniently.
At the beginning of this book we stressed the scalability aspect of Scala. We claimed that the combination of Scala’s object-oriented and functional constructs makes it suitable for programs ranging from small scripts to very large systems. The spreadsheet presented here is clearly still a small system, even though it would probably take up much more than 200 lines in most other languages. Nevertheless, you can see many of the details that make Scala scalable at play in this application.
The spreadsheet uses Scala’s classes and traits with their mixin composition to combine its components in flexible ways. Recursive dependencies between components are expressed using self types. The need for static state is completely eliminated—the only top-level components that are not classes
Cover · Overview · Contents · Discuss · Suggest · Glossary · Index
Section 35.8 |
Chapter 35 · The SCells Spreadsheet |
824 |
are formula trees and formula parsers, and both of these are purely functional. The application also uses higher-order functions and pattern matching extensively, both for accessing formulas and for event handling. So it is a good showcase of how functional and object-oriented programming can be combined smoothly.
One important reason why the spreadsheet application is so concise is that it can base itself on powerful libraries. The parser combinator library provides in effect an internal domain-specific language for writing parsers. Without it, parsing formulas would have been much more difficult. The event handling in Scala’s Swing libraries is a good example of the power of control abstractions. If you know Java’s Swing libraries, you probably appreciate the conciseness of Scala’s reactions concept, particularly when compared to the tedium of writing notify methods and implementing listener interfaces in the classical publish/subscribe design pattern. So the spreadsheet demonstrates the benefits of extensibility, where high-level libraries can be made to look just like language extensions.
Cover · Overview · Contents · Discuss · Suggest · Glossary · Index