...
| Objective-C | Java | Scala | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
<ac:structured-macro ac:name="unmigrated-wiki-markup" ac:schema-version="1" ac:macro-id="6d3da5349f9e48a1-f5ad3aa9-48984feb-b9538bb1-9e34cd5e74a1674d5ed1e980"><ac:plain-text-body><![CDATA[ | getter | | | | ]]></ac:plain-text-body></ac:structured-macro> |
<ac:structured-macro ac:name="unmigrated-wiki-markup" ac:schema-version="1" ac:macro-id="408ba0e301a22eab-1f046562-47694114-b3f88e7c-77888316c012c4289a2f3efe"><ac:plain-text-body><![CDATA[ | setter | | | | ]]></ac:plain-text-body></ac:structured-macro> |
...
After that, you may access the typical Scala collection methods directly on NSArray. This employs a feature of Scala known as implicit conversions to automagically cast a NSArray (a Java Iterable) into a Scala Iterable while leaving the actual object unchanged. Alternatively, you could generate an actual new scala.List instance by calling myNSArray.toList.
How to Add Scala to a WO Project (in Eclipse)
...