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Learn Scala Programming

You're reading from   Learn Scala Programming A comprehensive guide covering functional and reactive programming with Scala 2.13, Akka, and Lagom

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788836302
Length 498 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Slava Schmidt Slava Schmidt
Author Profile Icon Slava Schmidt
Slava Schmidt
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Toc

Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

Preface 1. An Introduction to Scala 2.13 2. Understanding Types in Scala FREE CHAPTER 3. Deep Dive into Functions 4. Getting to Know Implicits and Type Classes 5. Property-Based Testing in Scala 6. Exploring Built-In Effects 7. Understanding Algebraic Structures 8. Dealing with Effects 9. Familiarizing Yourself with Basic Monads 10. A Look at Monad Transformers and Free Monad 11. An Introduction to the Akka and Actor Models 12. Building Reactive Applications with Akka Typed 13. Basics of Akka Streams 14. Project 1 - Building Microservices with Scala 15. Project 2 - Building Microservices with Lagom 16. Preparing the Environment and Running Code Samples 17. Assessments 18. Other Books You May Enjoy

Foldable

The monoid identity property allows us to handle empty collections in a general way. So, instead of having the following:

  def reduceLeft(op: (A, A) => A): A

We'll have a definition that takes an identity element as another parameter. By convention, this approach is called fold:

  def foldLeft(identity: A)(op: (A, A) => A): A

The reason for the name foldLeft is that the identity element is used as an initial argument for reducing the collection, which leads to the following sequence of calls:

op(op(op(op(identity, a1), a2), a3), a4), ...

Optionally, it is represented in postfix-notation:

(((identity op a1) op a2) op a3) ...

Which is, well, kind of folding the collection, starting with the identity and the first element of it.

The associativity of the operation and the identity element tells us that another approach is also possible, starting from the identity...

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