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Learn Scala Programming

Learn Scala Programming

By : Schmidt
1.5 (2)
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Learn Scala Programming

Learn Scala Programming

1.5 (2)
By: Schmidt

Overview of this book

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

Scala 2.13 is the latest minor update of the Scala programming language. Despite looking like a minor bump in the version number, this release is much more important than it might appear.

The reason for this is that its main focus is the reworked collection library, which is going to replace the current version introduced in version 2.8 and slightly redesigned in version 2.9.

The new collection framework is here to stay in Scala 2 and also will become a part of Scala 3.

As it is mostly a library release, the language itself is not changing a lot as compared to the previous version. Apart from the collections, the new version improves on three aspects:

  • Minimizes the core library
  • Speeds up the compiler
  • Improves user-friendliness

These details are outside of the scope of this book and we will not discuss them further.

Besides that, there is an addition of literal and singleton types, which we will discuss in detail in Chapter 2, Understanding Types in Scala, and a few minor changes to the standard library which we'll look at next, before diving into the sea of maps and lists.

Eager to look into the future? We'll take you there!

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