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Learning Concurrent Programming in Scala

You're reading from   Learning Concurrent Programming in Scala Dive into the Scala framework with this programming guide, created to help you learn Scala and to build intricate, modern, scalable concurrent applications

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2014
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781783281411
Length 366 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Aleksandar Prokopec Aleksandar Prokopec
Author Profile Icon Aleksandar Prokopec
Aleksandar Prokopec
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Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction FREE CHAPTER 2. Concurrency on the JVM and the Java Memory Model 3. Traditional Building Blocks of Concurrency 4. Asynchronous Programming with Futures and Promises 5. Data-Parallel Collections 6. Concurrent Programming with Reactive Extensions 7. Software Transactional Memory 8. Actors 9. Concurrency in Practice Index

Summary

In this chapter, we showed how to create and start threads, and wait for their termination. We have shown how to achieve inter-thread communication by modifying the shared memory and by using the synchronized statement, and what it means for a thread to be in a blocked state. We have studied approaches to prevent deadlocks by imposing ordering on the locks and avoided busy-waits in place of guarded blocks. We have seen how to implement a graceful shutdown for thread termination and when to communicate using volatiles. We witnessed how the correctness of a program can be compromised by undesired interactions known as race conditions as well as data races due to the lack of synchronization. And, most importantly, we have learned that the only way to correctly reason about the semantics of a multithreaded program is in terms of happens-before relationships defined by the JMM.

The language primitives and APIs presented in this section are low-level; they are the basic building blocks...

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