Changes for page WebObjects with Scala
Last modified by Ravi Mendis on 2011/05/10 02:10
From version 492.1
edited by Ravi Mendis
on 2010/12/24 00:11
on 2010/12/24 00:11
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To version 495.1
edited by Ravi Mendis
on 2010/12/24 03:05
on 2010/12/24 03:05
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... ... @@ -1,15 +1,15 @@ 1 1 === What is Scala? === 2 2 3 -[[Scala>>http:// en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scala_(programming_language)]] is a modern, multi-paradigm JVM language that is most often compared to [[Groovy>>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Groovy_(programming_language)]], [[Clojure>>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clojure]] or [[Erlang>>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erlang_(programming_language)]]. Its [[functional language>>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Functional_programming]] foundations and built-in Actors library makesit especially attractive for concurrent computing.Inthisday andageof multi-coreprocessorsconcurrentcomputingcannotbered.3 +[[Scala>>http://www.scala-lang.org/]] is a modern, multi-paradigm JVM language that is most often compared to [[Groovy>>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Groovy_(programming_language)]], [[Clojure>>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clojure]] or [[Erlang>>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erlang_(programming_language)]]. Its [[functional language>>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Functional_programming]] foundations and built-in [[Actors>>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Actor_model]] library make it especially attractive for concurrent computing. (Scala is an abbreviation for "scalable" hinting at its design goals). 4 4 5 - Many ofScala's features have beendesignedwith concurrency in mind, some of which may not be unfamiliar to Objective-C or WebObjects developers. Here's a summary:5 +In this day and age of multi-core processors concurrent computing can not be ignored. Many of the design features of Scala have been chosen with concurrency in mind, some of which may not be unfamiliar to Objective-C or WebObjects developers. Here's a summary: 6 6 7 7 |= |= Objective-C |= Java |= Scala 8 -|= Immutability | Collections //e.g: NSArray/NSMutableArray// | No | Yes9 -|= Closures | Blocks (//Extension//) | No | Anonymous Functions 8 +|= Immutability | Partial - via collections //e.g: NSArray/NSMutableArray// | No | Yes 9 +|= Closures | Yes - via Blocks (//Extension//) | No | Yes - via Anonymous Functions 10 10 |= Static variables | Yes | Yes | No 11 -|= Static methods or functions| Yes | Yes | No12 -|= Concurrency | [[Grand Central Dispatch>>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grand_Central_Dispatch]] (//Extension//) | //Threads// | [[Actors>>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Actor_model]] 11 +|= Static methods | Yes | Yes | No 12 +|= Concurrency | Yes - via [[Grand Central Dispatch>>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grand_Central_Dispatch]] (//Extension//) | //Yes - via Threads// | Yes - via [[Actors>>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Actor_model]] 13 13 |= |= Weakly Typed |= --Strongly Typed-- |= Strongly Typed 14 14 15 15 Other notable features include: ... ... @@ -16,7 +16,7 @@ 16 16 17 17 |= |= Objective-C |= Java |= Scala 18 18 |= Parametered methods | Yes //e.g: addObject: to~:// | No | Yes //e.g: add(object= ,to=)// 19 -|= Class composition | Categories | Interfaces | Traits 19 +|= Class composition | Yes - via Categories | Yes - via Interfaces | Yes - via [[Traits>>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trait_(computer_science)]] 20 20 21 21 === Why Use Scala? === 22 22 ... ... @@ -25,13 +25,13 @@ 25 25 === Can WebObjects be Programmed In Scala? === 26 26 27 27 Yes. It is very simple. 28 -Scala compiles to java bytecode. 28 +By virtue of being a JVM-language, Scala compiles to java bytecode. 29 29 30 30 Furthermore, being a multi-paradigm language grants Scala easy WebObjects-interoperability. 31 31 32 32 ===== Caveats ===== 33 33 34 -Legacy tool support is often cited as a weak point. If your Application class is in Scala thenyou will have to create anEclipselaunch configuration manually. Also the [[Scala plugin>>http://www.scala-ide.org]]can be slow at times and sometimes buggy.34 +Legacy tool support is often cited as a weak point. The [[Eclipse Scala plugin>>http://www.scala-ide.org]] has been found to be slow at times and sometimes buggy. 35 35 36 36 = WebObjects In Scala = 37 37 ... ... @@ -44,7 +44,7 @@ 44 44 Scala doesn't have static variables or methods. Instead Scala employs the [[Singleton Pattern>>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Singleton_pattern]] which is built into the language and is **thread-safe**: a class can have a //Companion Object// that will allow you to achieve something equivalent to static variables - but better. 45 45 46 46 You don't have to worry about synchronizing access to shared mutable fields in a concurrent application. 47 -This is not however true for mu table ##val## e.g:##NSMutableArray##, ##scala.collection.mutable.ListBuffer##whichyou will have to synchronizethe adding to or removing from.47 +(This is not however true when for example you have a ##val## declared as a ##NSMutableArray##. You will still have to synchronize when adding to or removing from this mutable field). 48 48 49 49 The following is an example of the use of a //Companion Object// for Talent in Scala instead of Talent static fields in Java. 50 50 ... ... @@ -61,7 +61,7 @@ 61 61 62 62 {{code}} 63 63 64 -object Talent extends EOGenericRecord{64 +object Talent { 65 65 val ENTITY_NAME = "Talent" 66 66 67 67 {{/code}} ... ... @@ -76,8 +76,6 @@ 76 76 77 77 ==== Compacted imports ==== 78 78 79 -Two lines in Java are compacted into one in Scala. 80 - 81 81 In Java: 82 82 83 83 {{code value="java"}} ... ... @@ -164,7 +164,7 @@ 164 164 165 165 ==== Scala Annotations vs. Generated Accessors ==== 166 166 167 - An example of accessing variables inWebObjects withthe following languages:165 +Here's an example of accessing variables in the following languages: 168 168 169 169 |= |= Objective-C |= Java |= Scala 170 170 |= getter | ##object name## | ##object.name()## | ##object.name## ... ... @@ -196,18 +196,12 @@ 196 196 197 197 {{/code}} 198 198 199 -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.197 +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. 200 200 201 -== How to Add Scala to a WO Project == 199 +== How to Add Scala to a WO Project (in Eclipse) == 202 202 203 203 {{include value="WOL:Adding Scala Support to a WOLips Project"}}{{/include}} 204 204 205 -{{note}} 206 - 207 -This is for Eclipse/WOLips IDE 208 - 209 -{{/note}} 210 - 211 211 == WO Scala Example == 212 212 213 213 The following example is an almost 100% Scala WO app. In reality it is a mixed Java/Scala app: