Before we start learning about immutable and mutable collections in Scala, we'll try to solve a simple problem using powerful methods provided by Scala collections. For that, let's take a look at a scenario:
![](https://static.packt-cdn.com/products/9781788392822/graphics/assets/bf0b1831-a6e1-4d14-bc10-4b0c56f75c7e.png)
As shown in the preceding image, we have a set of APIs with method types such as GET, POST, and PUT, and their associated URIs. As these are two entities (method and URI), think of all these as a list of tuples. Now we want to segregate them, so we can create a map, as shown in the right column of the preceding image. A map is a collection that stores values in a key-value pair. Hence, on the right side you can see API information as key-value pairs, where key is the method name, and the value is a list of URIs for that particular request type. So, the idea is to convert List[(String, String)] to Map[String, List[String]]. You may want...