Computes the difference of this set and another set.
the set of elements to exclude.
a set containing those elements of this set that are not also contained in the given set that
.
Iterator can be used only once
Test two objects for inequality.
true
if !(this == that), false otherwise.
Equivalent to x.hashCode
except for boxed numeric types and null
. For numerics, it returns a hash value which is consistent with value equality: if two value type instances compare as true, then ## will produce the same hash value for each of them. For null
returns a hashcode where null.hashCode
throws a NullPointerException
.
a hash value consistent with ==
Alias for concat
The expression x == that
is equivalent to if (x eq null) that eq null else x.equals(that)
.
true
if the receiver object is equivalent to the argument; false
otherwise.
Appends all elements of this collection to a string builder. The written text consists of the string representations (w.r.t. the method toString
) of all elements of this collection without any separator string.
Example:
scala> val a = List(1,2,3,4) a: List[Int] = List(1, 2, 3, 4) scala> val b = new StringBuilder() b: StringBuilder = scala> val h = a.addString(b) h: StringBuilder = 1234
the string builder to which elements are appended.
the string builder b
to which elements were appended.
Appends all elements of this collection to a string builder using a separator string. The written text consists of the string representations (w.r.t. the method toString
) of all elements of this collection, separated by the string sep
.
Example:
scala> val a = List(1,2,3,4) a: List[Int] = List(1, 2, 3, 4) scala> val b = new StringBuilder() b: StringBuilder = scala> a.addString(b, ", ") res0: StringBuilder = 1, 2, 3, 4
the string builder to which elements are appended.
the separator string.
the string builder b
to which elements were appended.
Appends all elements of this collection to a string builder using start, end, and separator strings. The written text begins with the string start
and ends with the string end
. Inside, the string representations (w.r.t. the method toString
) of all elements of this collection are separated by the string sep
.
Example:
scala> val a = List(1,2,3,4) a: List[Int] = List(1, 2, 3, 4) scala> val b = new StringBuilder() b: StringBuilder = scala> a.addString(b , "List(" , ", " , ")") res5: StringBuilder = List(1, 2, 3, 4)
the string builder to which elements are appended.
the starting string.
the separator string.
the ending string.
the string builder b
to which elements were appended.
Composes two instances of Function1 in a new Function1, with this function applied first.
the result type of function g
a function R => A
a new function f
such that f(x) == g(apply(x))
Tests if some element is contained in this set.
This method is equivalent to contains
. It allows sets to be interpreted as predicates.
the element to test for membership.
true
if elem
is contained in this set, false
otherwise.
Cast the receiver object to be of type T0
.
Note that the success of a cast at runtime is modulo Scala's erasure semantics. Therefore the expression 1.asInstanceOf[String]
will throw a ClassCastException
at runtime, while the expression List(1).asInstanceOf[List[String]]
will not. In the latter example, because the type argument is erased as part of compilation it is not possible to check whether the contents of the list are of the requested type.
the receiver object.
ClassCastException
if the receiver object is not an instance of the erasure of type T0
.
A method that should be called from every well-designed equals method that is open to be overridden in a subclass. See Programming in Scala, Chapter 28 for discussion and design.
the value being probed for possible equality
true if this instance can possibly equal that
, otherwise false
Defines the prefix of this object's toString
representation.
It is recommended to return the name of the concrete collection type, but not implementation subclasses. For example, for ListMap
this method should return "ListMap"
, not "Map"
(the supertype) or "Node"
(an implementation subclass).
The default implementation returns "Iterable". It is overridden for the basic collection kinds "Seq", "IndexedSeq", "LinearSeq", "Buffer", "Set", "Map", "SortedSet", "SortedMap" and "View".
a string representation which starts the result of toString
applied to this iterable collection. By default the string prefix is the simple name of the collection class iterable collection.
Create a copy of the receiver object.
The default implementation of the clone
method is platform dependent.
a copy of the receiver object.
This collection as a C
.
Builds a new iterable collection by applying a partial function to all elements of this iterable collection on which the function is defined.
the element type of the returned iterable collection.
the partial function which filters and maps the iterable collection.
a new iterable collection resulting from applying the given partial function pf
to each element on which it is defined and collecting the results. The order of the elements is preserved.
Reuse: After calling this method, one should discard the iterator it was called on, and use only the iterator that was returned. Using the old iterator is undefined, subject to change, and may result in changes to the new iterator as well.
Finds the first element of the collection for which the given partial function is defined, and applies the partial function to it.
Note: may not terminate for infinite-sized collections.
Note: might return different results for different runs, unless the underlying collection type is ordered.
the partial function
an option value containing pf applied to the first value for which it is defined, or None
if none exists.
Seq("a", 1, 5L).collectFirst({ case x: Int => x*10 }) = Some(10)
Composes two instances of Function1 in a new Function1, with this function applied last.
the type to which function g
can be applied
a function A => T1
a new function f
such that f(x) == apply(g(x))
Creates a new set by adding all elements contained in another collection to this set, omitting duplicates.
This method takes a collection of elements and adds all elements, omitting duplicates, into set.
Example:
scala> val a = Set(1, 2) concat Set(2, 3) a: scala.collection.immutable.Set[Int] = Set(1, 2, 3)
the collection containing the elements to add.
a new set with the given elements added, omitting duplicates.
Returns a new iterable collection containing the elements from the left hand operand followed by the elements from the right hand operand. The element type of the iterable collection is the most specific superclass encompassing the element types of the two operands.
the element type of the returned collection.
the traversable to append.
a new iterable collection which contains all elements of this iterable collection followed by all elements of suffix
.
Copy elements to an array, returning the number of elements written.
Fills the given array xs
starting at index start
with at most len
elements of this collection.
Copying will stop once either all the elements of this collection have been copied, or the end of the array is reached, or len
elements have been copied.
the type of the elements of the array.
the array to fill.
the starting index of xs.
the maximal number of elements to copy.
the number of elements written to the array
Reuse: After calling this method, one should discard the iterator it was called on. Using it is undefined and subject to change. Note: will not terminate for infinite-sized collections.
Copy elements to an array, returning the number of elements written.
Fills the given array xs
starting at index start
with values of this collection.
Copying will stop once either all the elements of this collection have been copied, or the end of the array is reached.
the type of the elements of the array.
the array to fill.
the starting index of xs.
the number of elements written to the array Note: will not terminate for infinite-sized collections.
Copy elements to an array, returning the number of elements written.
Fills the given array xs
starting at index start
with values of this collection.
Copying will stop once either all the elements of this collection have been copied, or the end of the array is reached.
the type of the elements of the array.
the array to fill.
the number of elements written to the array Note: will not terminate for infinite-sized collections.
Tests whether every element of this collection's iterator relates to the corresponding element of another collection by satisfying a test predicate.
the type of the elements of that
the other collection
the test predicate, which relates elements from both collections
true
if both collections have the same length and p(x, y)
is true
for all corresponding elements x
of this iterator and y
of that
, otherwise false
Counts the number of elements in the collection which satisfy a predicate.
the predicate used to test elements.
the number of elements satisfying the predicate p
.
Selects all elements except first n ones.
Note: might return different results for different runs, unless the underlying collection type is ordered.
the number of elements to drop from this iterable collection.
a iterable collection consisting of all elements of this iterable collection except the first n
ones, or else the empty iterable collection, if this iterable collection has less than n
elements. If n
is negative, don't drop any elements.
Reuse: After calling this method, one should discard the iterator it was called on, and use only the iterator that was returned. Using the old iterator is undefined, subject to change, and may result in changes to the new iterator as well.
Selects all elements except last n ones.
Note: might return different results for different runs, unless the underlying collection type is ordered.
the number of elements to drop from this iterable collection.
a iterable collection consisting of all elements of this iterable collection except the last n
ones, or else the empty iterable collection, if this iterable collection has less than n
elements. If n
is negative, don't drop any elements.
Drops longest prefix of elements that satisfy a predicate.
Note: might return different results for different runs, unless the underlying collection type is ordered.
The predicate used to test elements.
the longest suffix of this iterable collection whose first element does not satisfy the predicate p
.
Reuse: After calling this method, one should discard the iterator it was called on, and use only the iterator that was returned. Using the old iterator is undefined, subject to change, and may result in changes to the new iterator as well.
The empty iterable of the same type as this iterable
an empty iterable of type C
.
Tests whether the argument (that
) is a reference to the receiver object (this
).
The eq
method implements an equivalence relation on non-null instances of AnyRef
, and has three additional properties:
x
and y
of type AnyRef
, multiple invocations of x.eq(y)
consistently returns true
or consistently returns false
.For any non-null instance x
of type AnyRef
, x.eq(null)
and null.eq(x)
returns false
.
null.eq(null)
returns true
. When overriding the equals
or hashCode
methods, it is important to ensure that their behavior is consistent with reference equality. Therefore, if two objects are references to each other (o1 eq o2
), they should be equal to each other (o1 == o2
) and they should hash to the same value (o1.hashCode == o2.hashCode
).
true
if the argument is a reference to the receiver object; false
otherwise.
Tests whether a predicate holds for at least one element of this collection.
Note: may not terminate for infinite-sized collections.
the predicate used to test elements.
true
if the given predicate p
is satisfied by at least one element of this collection, otherwise false
Selects all elements of this iterable collection which satisfy a predicate.
a new iterator consisting of all elements of this iterable collection that satisfy the given predicate p
. The order of the elements is preserved.
Selects all elements of this iterable collection which do not satisfy a predicate.
the predicate used to test elements.
a new iterable collection consisting of all elements of this iterable collection that do not satisfy the given predicate pred
. Their order may not be preserved.
Called by the garbage collector on the receiver object when there are no more references to the object.
The details of when and if the finalize
method is invoked, as well as the interaction between finalize
and non-local returns and exceptions, are all platform dependent.
Finds the first element of the collection satisfying a predicate, if any.
Note: may not terminate for infinite-sized collections.
Note: might return different results for different runs, unless the underlying collection type is ordered.
the predicate used to test elements.
an option value containing the first element in the collection that satisfies p
, or None
if none exists.
Builds a new iterable collection by applying a function to all elements of this iterable collection and using the elements of the resulting collections.
For example:
def getWords(lines: Seq[String]): Seq[String] = lines flatMap (line => line split "\\W+")
The type of the resulting collection is guided by the static type of iterable collection. This might cause unexpected results sometimes. For example:
// lettersOf will return a Seq[Char] of likely repeated letters, instead of a Set def lettersOf(words: Seq[String]) = words flatMap (word => word.toSet) // lettersOf will return a Set[Char], not a Seq def lettersOf(words: Seq[String]) = words.toSet flatMap ((word: String) => word.toSeq) // xs will be an Iterable[Int] val xs = Map("a" -> List(11,111), "b" -> List(22,222)).flatMap(_._2) // ys will be a Map[Int, Int] val ys = Map("a" -> List(1 -> 11,1 -> 111), "b" -> List(2 -> 22,2 -> 222)).flatMap(_._2)
the element type of the returned collection.
the function to apply to each element.
a new iterable collection resulting from applying the given collection-valued function f
to each element of this iterable collection and concatenating the results.
Reuse: After calling this method, one should discard the iterator it was called on, and use only the iterator that was returned. Using the old iterator is undefined, subject to change, and may result in changes to the new iterator as well.
Converts this iterable collection of traversable collections into a iterable collection formed by the elements of these traversable collections.
The resulting collection's type will be guided by the type of iterable collection. For example:
val xs = List( Set(1, 2, 3), Set(1, 2, 3) ).flatten // xs == List(1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 3) val ys = Set( List(1, 2, 3), List(3, 2, 1) ).flatten // ys == Set(1, 2, 3)
the type of the elements of each traversable collection.
an implicit conversion which asserts that the element type of this iterable collection is a GenTraversable
.
a new iterable collection resulting from concatenating all element iterable collections.
Reuse: After calling this method, one should discard the iterator it was called on, and use only the iterator that was returned. Using the old iterator is undefined, subject to change, and may result in changes to the new iterator as well.
Folds the elements of this collection using the specified associative binary operator. The default implementation in IterableOnce
is equivalent to foldLeft
but may be overridden for more efficient traversal orders.
The order in which operations are performed on elements is unspecified and may be nondeterministic.
Note: will not terminate for infinite-sized collections.
a type parameter for the binary operator, a supertype of A
.
a neutral element for the fold operation; may be added to the result an arbitrary number of times, and must not change the result (e.g., Nil
for list concatenation, 0 for addition, or 1 for multiplication).
a binary operator that must be associative.
the result of applying the fold operator op
between all the elements and z
, or z
if this collection is empty.
Applies a binary operator to a start value and all elements of this collection, going left to right.
Note: will not terminate for infinite-sized collections.
Note: might return different results for different runs, unless the underlying collection type is ordered or the operator is associative and commutative.
the result type of the binary operator.
the start value.
the binary operator.
the result of inserting op
between consecutive elements of this collection, going left to right with the start value z
on the left:
op(...op(z, x_1), x_2, ..., x_n)
where x1, ..., xn
are the elements of this collection. Returns z
if this collection is empty.
Applies a binary operator to all elements of this collection and a start value, going right to left.
Note: will not terminate for infinite-sized collections.
Note: might return different results for different runs, unless the underlying collection type is ordered or the operator is associative and commutative.
the result type of the binary operator.
the start value.
the binary operator.
the result of inserting op
between consecutive elements of this collection, going right to left with the start value z
on the right:
op(x_1, op(x_2, ... op(x_n, z)...))
where x1, ..., xn
are the elements of this collection. Returns z
if this collection is empty.
Tests whether a predicate holds for all elements of this collection.
Note: may not terminate for infinite-sized collections.
the predicate used to test elements.
true
if this collection is empty or the given predicate p
holds for all elements of this collection, otherwise false
.
Apply f
to each element for its side effects Note: [U] parameter needed to help scalac's type inference.
Returns string formatted according to given format
string. Format strings are as for String.format
(@see java.lang.String.format).
Defines how to turn a given Iterable[A]
into a collection of type C
.
This process can be done in a strict way or a non-strict way (ie. without evaluating the elements of the resulting collections). In other words, this methods defines the evaluation model of the collection.
When implementing a custom collection type and refining C
to the new type, this method needs to be overridden (the compiler will issue an error otherwise). In the common case where C =:= CC[A]
, this can be done by mixing in the IterableFactoryDefaults trait, which implements the method using iterableFactory.
As witnessed by the @uncheckedVariance
annotation, using this method might be unsound. However, as long as it is called with an Iterable[A]
obtained from this
collection (as it is the case in the implementations of operations where we use a View[A]
), it is safe.
Returns the runtime class representation of the object.
a class object corresponding to the runtime type of the receiver.
Partitions this iterable collection into a map of iterable collections according to some discriminator function.
Note: Even when applied to a view or a lazy collection it will always force the elements.
the type of keys returned by the discriminator function.
the discriminator function.
A map from keys to iterable collections such that the following invariant holds:
(xs groupBy f)(k) = xs filter (x => f(x) == k)
That is, every key k
is bound to a iterable collection of those elements x
for which f(x)
equals k
.
Partitions this iterable collection into a map of iterable collections according to a discriminator function key
. Each element in a group is transformed into a value of type B
using the value
function.
It is equivalent to groupBy(key).mapValues(_.map(f))
, but more efficient.
case class User(name: String, age: Int) def namesByAge(users: Seq[User]): Map[Int, Seq[String]] = users.groupMap(_.age)(_.name)
Note: Even when applied to a view or a lazy collection it will always force the elements.
the type of keys returned by the discriminator function
the type of values returned by the transformation function
the discriminator function
the element transformation function
Partitions this iterable collection into a map according to a discriminator function key
. All the values that have the same discriminator are then transformed by the value
function and then reduced into a single value with the reduce
function.
It is equivalent to groupBy(key).mapValues(_.map(f).reduce(reduce))
, but more efficient.
def occurrences[A](as: Seq[A]): Map[A, Int] = as.groupMapReduce(identity)(_ => 1)(_ + _)
Note: Even when applied to a view or a lazy collection it will always force the elements.
Partitions elements in fixed size iterable collections.
the number of elements per group
An iterator producing iterable collections of size size
, except the last will be less than size size
if the elements don't divide evenly.
scala.collection.Iterator, method grouped
The hashCode method for reference types. See hashCode in scala.Any.
the hash code value for this object.
Selects the first element of this iterable collection.
Note: might return different results for different runs, unless the underlying collection type is ordered.
the first element of this iterable collection.
NoSuchElementException
if the iterable collection is empty.
Optionally selects the first element.
Note: might return different results for different runs, unless the underlying collection type is ordered.
the first element of this iterable collection if it is nonempty, None
if it is empty.
The initial part of the collection without its last element.
Note: Even when applied to a view or a lazy collection it will always force the elements.
Iterates over the inits of this iterable collection. The first value will be this iterable collection and the final one will be an empty iterable collection, with the intervening values the results of successive applications of init
.
Note: Even when applied to a view or a lazy collection it will always force the elements.
an iterator over all the inits of this iterable collection
List(1,2,3).inits = Iterator(List(1,2,3), List(1,2), List(1), Nil)
Computes the intersection between this set and another set.
the set to intersect with.
a new set consisting of all elements that are both in this set and in the given set that
.
Tests whether the collection is empty.
Note: Implementations in subclasses that are not repeatedly traversable must take care not to consume any elements when isEmpty
is called.
true
if the collection contains no elements, false
otherwise.
Test whether the dynamic type of the receiver object is T0
.
Note that the result of the test is modulo Scala's erasure semantics. Therefore the expression 1.isInstanceOf[String]
will return false
, while the expression List(1).isInstanceOf[List[String]]
will return true
. In the latter example, because the type argument is erased as part of compilation it is not possible to check whether the contents of the list are of the specified type.
true
if the receiver object is an instance of erasure of type T0
; false
otherwise.
Tests whether this iterable collection can be repeatedly traversed. Always true for Iterables and false for Iterators unless overridden.
true
if it is repeatedly traversable, false
otherwise.
The companion object of this set, providing various factory methods.
When implementing a custom collection type and refining CC
to the new type, this method needs to be overridden to return a factory for the new type (the compiler will issue an error otherwise).
The number of elements in this collection, if it can be cheaply computed, -1 otherwise. Cheaply usually means: Not requiring a collection traversal.
Selects the last element.
Note: might return different results for different runs, unless the underlying collection type is ordered.
The last element of this iterable collection.
NoSuchElementException
If the iterable collection is empty.
Optionally selects the last element.
Note: might return different results for different runs, unless the underlying collection type is ordered.
the last element of this iterable collection$ if it is nonempty, None
if it is empty.
Analogous to zip
except that the elements in each collection are not consumed until a strict operation is invoked on the returned LazyZip2
decorator.
Calls to lazyZip
can be chained to support higher arities (up to 4) without incurring the expense of constructing and deconstructing intermediary tuples.
val xs = List(1, 2, 3) val res = (xs lazyZip xs lazyZip xs lazyZip xs).map((a, b, c, d) => a + b + c + d) // res == List(4, 8, 12)
the type of the second element in each eventual pair
the iterable providing the second element of each eventual pair
a decorator LazyZip2
that allows strict operations to be performed on the lazily evaluated pairs or chained calls to lazyZip
. Implicit conversion to Iterable[(A, B)]
is also supported.
Builds a new iterable collection by applying a function to all elements of this iterable collection.
the element type of the returned iterable collection.
the function to apply to each element.
a new iterable collection resulting from applying the given function f
to each element of this iterable collection and collecting the results.
Reuse: After calling this method, one should discard the iterator it was called on, and use only the iterator that was returned. Using the old iterator is undefined, subject to change, and may result in changes to the new iterator as well.
Finds the largest element.
The type over which the ordering is defined.
An ordering to be used for comparing elements.
the largest element of this collection with respect to the ordering ord
.
UnsupportedOperationException
if this collection is empty.
Finds the first element which yields the largest value measured by function f.
The result type of the function f.
The measuring function.
An ordering to be used for comparing elements.
the first element of this collection with the largest value measured by function f with respect to the ordering cmp
.
UnsupportedOperationException
if this collection is empty.
Finds the first element which yields the largest value measured by function f.
The result type of the function f.
The measuring function.
An ordering to be used for comparing elements.
an option value containing the first element of this collection with the largest value measured by function f with respect to the ordering cmp
.
Finds the largest element.
The type over which the ordering is defined.
An ordering to be used for comparing elements.
an option value containing the largest element of this collection with respect to the ordering ord
.
Finds the smallest element.
The type over which the ordering is defined.
An ordering to be used for comparing elements.
the smallest element of this collection with respect to the ordering ord
.
UnsupportedOperationException
if this collection is empty.
Finds the first element which yields the smallest value measured by function f.
The result type of the function f.
The measuring function.
An ordering to be used for comparing elements.
the first element of this collection with the smallest value measured by function f with respect to the ordering cmp
.
UnsupportedOperationException
if this collection is empty.
Finds the first element which yields the smallest value measured by function f.
The result type of the function f.
The measuring function.
An ordering to be used for comparing elements.
an option value containing the first element of this collection with the smallest value measured by function f with respect to the ordering cmp
.
Finds the smallest element.
The type over which the ordering is defined.
An ordering to be used for comparing elements.
an option value containing the smallest element of this collection with respect to the ordering ord
.
Displays all elements of this collection in a string.
Delegates to addString, which can be overridden.
a string representation of this collection. In the resulting string the string representations (w.r.t. the method toString
) of all elements of this collection follow each other without any separator string.
Displays all elements of this collection in a string using a separator string.
Delegates to addString, which can be overridden.
the separator string.
a string representation of this collection. In the resulting string the string representations (w.r.t. the method toString
) of all elements of this collection are separated by the string sep
.
List(1, 2, 3).mkString("|") = "1|2|3"
Displays all elements of this collection in a string using start, end, and separator strings.
Delegates to addString, which can be overridden.
the starting string.
the separator string.
the ending string.
a string representation of this collection. The resulting string begins with the string start
and ends with the string end
. Inside, the string representations (w.r.t. the method toString
) of all elements of this collection are separated by the string sep
.
List(1, 2, 3).mkString("(", "; ", ")") = "(1; 2; 3)"
Equivalent to !(this eq that)
.
true
if the argument is not a reference to the receiver object; false
otherwise.
a strict builder for the same collection type. Note that in the case of lazy collections (e.g. View or immutable.LazyList), it is possible to implement this method but the resulting Builder
will break laziness. As a consequence, operations should preferably be implemented with fromSpecific
instead of this method.
When implementing a custom collection type and refining C
to the new type, this method needs to be overridden (the compiler will issue an error otherwise). In the common case where C =:= CC[A]
, this can be done by mixing in the IterableFactoryDefaults trait, which implements the method using iterableFactory.
As witnessed by the @uncheckedVariance
annotation, using this method might be unsound. However, as long as the returned builder is only fed with A
values taken from this
instance, it is safe.
Tests whether the collection is not empty.
true
if the collection contains at least one element, false
otherwise.
Wakes up a single thread that is waiting on the receiver object's monitor.
not specified by SLS as a member of AnyRef
Wakes up all threads that are waiting on the receiver object's monitor.
not specified by SLS as a member of AnyRef
A pair of, first, all elements that satisfy predicate p
and, second, all elements that do not. Interesting because it splits a collection in two.
The default implementation provided here needs to traverse the collection twice. Strict collections have an overridden version of partition
in StrictOptimizedIterableOps
, which requires only a single traversal.
Applies a function f
to each element of the iterable collection and returns a pair of iterable collections: the first one made of those values returned by f
that were wrapped in scala.util.Left, and the second one made of those wrapped in scala.util.Right.
Example:
val xs = Iterable(1, "one", 2, "two", 3, "three") partitionMap { case i: Int => Left(i) case s: String => Right(s) } // xs == (Iterable(1, 2, 3), // Iterable(one, two, three))
the element type of the first resulting collection
the element type of the second resulting collection
the 'split function' mapping the elements of this iterable collection to an scala.util.Either
a pair of iterable collections: the first one made of those values returned by f
that were wrapped in scala.util.Left, and the second one made of those wrapped in scala.util.Right.
Multiplies up the elements of this collection.
the result type of the *
operator.
an implicit parameter defining a set of numeric operations which includes the *
operator to be used in forming the product.
the product of all elements of this collection with respect to the *
operator in num
.
Reduces the elements of this collection using the specified associative binary operator.
The order in which operations are performed on elements is unspecified and may be nondeterministic.
A type parameter for the binary operator, a supertype of A
.
A binary operator that must be associative.
The result of applying reduce operator op
between all the elements if the collection is nonempty.
UnsupportedOperationException
if this collection is empty.
Applies a binary operator to all elements of this collection, going left to right.
Note: will not terminate for infinite-sized collections.
Note: might return different results for different runs, unless the underlying collection type is ordered or the operator is associative and commutative.
the result type of the binary operator.
the binary operator.
the result of inserting op
between consecutive elements of this collection, going left to right:
op( op( ... op(x_1, x_2) ..., x_{n-1}), x_n)
where x1, ..., xn
are the elements of this collection.
UnsupportedOperationException
if this collection is empty.
Optionally applies a binary operator to all elements of this collection, going left to right.
Note: will not terminate for infinite-sized collections.
Note: might return different results for different runs, unless the underlying collection type is ordered or the operator is associative and commutative.
the result type of the binary operator.
the binary operator.
an option value containing the result of reduceLeft(op)
if this collection is nonempty, None
otherwise.
Reduces the elements of this collection, if any, using the specified associative binary operator.
The order in which operations are performed on elements is unspecified and may be nondeterministic.
A type parameter for the binary operator, a supertype of A
.
A binary operator that must be associative.
An option value containing result of applying reduce operator op
between all the elements if the collection is nonempty, and None
otherwise.
Applies a binary operator to all elements of this collection, going right to left.
Note: will not terminate for infinite-sized collections.
Note: might return different results for different runs, unless the underlying collection type is ordered or the operator is associative and commutative.
the result type of the binary operator.
the binary operator.
the result of inserting op
between consecutive elements of this collection, going right to left:
op(x_1, op(x_2, ..., op(x_{n-1}, x_n)...))
where x1, ..., xn
are the elements of this collection.
UnsupportedOperationException
if this collection is empty.
Optionally applies a binary operator to all elements of this collection, going right to left.
Note: will not terminate for infinite-sized collections.
Note: might return different results for different runs, unless the underlying collection type is ordered or the operator is associative and commutative.
the result type of the binary operator.
the binary operator.
an option value containing the result of reduceRight(op)
if this collection is nonempty, None
otherwise.
Computes a prefix scan of the elements of the collection.
Note: The neutral element z
may be applied more than once.
element type of the resulting collection
neutral element for the operator op
the associative operator for the scan
a new iterable collection containing the prefix scan of the elements in this iterable collection
Produces a iterable collection containing cumulative results of applying the operator going left to right, including the initial value.
Note: will not terminate for infinite-sized collections.
Note: might return different results for different runs, unless the underlying collection type is ordered.
the type of the elements in the resulting collection
the initial value
the binary operator applied to the intermediate result and the element
collection with intermediate results
Reuse: After calling this method, one should discard the iterator it was called on, and use only the iterator that was returned. Using the old iterator is undefined, subject to change, and may result in changes to the new iterator as well.
Produces a collection containing cumulative results of applying the operator going right to left. The head of the collection is the last cumulative result.
Note: will not terminate for infinite-sized collections.
Note: might return different results for different runs, unless the underlying collection type is ordered.
Note: Even when applied to a view or a lazy collection it will always force the elements.
Example:
List(1, 2, 3, 4).scanRight(0)(_ + _) == List(10, 9, 7, 4, 0)
the type of the elements in the resulting collection
the initial value
the binary operator applied to the intermediate result and the element
collection with intermediate results
The size of this collection.
Note: will not terminate for infinite-sized collections.
the number of elements in this collection.
Compares the size of this iterable collection to the size of another Iterable
.
the Iterable
whose size is compared with this iterable collection's size.
A value x
where
x < 0 if this.size < that.size x == 0 if this.size == that.size x > 0 if this.size > that.size
The method as implemented here does not call size
directly; its running time is O(this.size min that.size)
instead of O(this.size + that.size)
. The method should be overridden if computing size
is cheap and knownSize
returns -1
.
Compares the size of this iterable collection to a test value.
the test value that gets compared with the size.
A value x
where
x < 0 if this.size < otherSize x == 0 if this.size == otherSize x > 0 if this.size > otherSize
The method as implemented here does not call size
directly; its running time is O(size min otherSize)
instead of O(size)
. The method should be overridden if computing size
is cheap and knownSize
returns -1
.
Returns a value class containing operations for comparing the size of this iterable collection to a test value.
These operations are implemented in terms of sizeCompare(Int)
, and allow the following more readable usages:
this.sizeIs < size // this.sizeCompare(size) < 0 this.sizeIs <= size // this.sizeCompare(size) <= 0 this.sizeIs == size // this.sizeCompare(size) == 0 this.sizeIs != size // this.sizeCompare(size) != 0 this.sizeIs >= size // this.sizeCompare(size) >= 0 this.sizeIs > size // this.sizeCompare(size) > 0
Selects an interval of elements. The returned iterable collection is made up of all elements x
which satisfy the invariant:
from <= indexOf(x) < until
Note: might return different results for different runs, unless the underlying collection type is ordered.
the lowest index to include from this iterable collection.
the lowest index to EXCLUDE from this iterable collection.
a iterable collection containing the elements greater than or equal to index from
extending up to (but not including) index until
of this iterable collection.
Reuse: After calling this method, one should discard the iterator it was called on, and use only the iterator that was returned. Using the old iterator is undefined, subject to change, and may result in changes to the new iterator as well.
Groups elements in fixed size blocks by passing a "sliding window" over them (as opposed to partitioning them, as is done in grouped.)
the number of elements per group
the distance between the first elements of successive groups
An iterator producing iterable collections of size size
, except the last element (which may be the only element) will be truncated if there are fewer than size
elements remaining to be grouped.
scala.collection.Iterator, method sliding
Groups elements in fixed size blocks by passing a "sliding window" over them (as opposed to partitioning them, as is done in grouped
.) The "sliding window" step is set to one.
the number of elements per group
An iterator producing iterable collections of size size
, except the last element (which may be the only element) will be truncated if there are fewer than size
elements remaining to be grouped.
scala.collection.Iterator, method sliding
Splits this iterable collection into a prefix/suffix pair according to a predicate.
Note: c span p
is equivalent to (but possibly more efficient than) (c takeWhile p, c dropWhile p)
, provided the evaluation of the predicate p
does not cause any side-effects.
Note: might return different results for different runs, unless the underlying collection type is ordered.
the test predicate
a pair consisting of the longest prefix of this iterable collection whose elements all satisfy p
, and the rest of this iterable collection.
Reuse: After calling this method, one should discard the iterator it was called on, and use only the iterators that were returned. Using the old iterator is undefined, subject to change, and may result in changes to the new iterators as well.
Splits this iterable collection into a prefix/suffix pair at a given position.
Note: c splitAt n
is equivalent to (but possibly more efficient than) (c take n, c drop n)
.
Note: might return different results for different runs, unless the underlying collection type is ordered.
the position at which to split.
a pair of iterable collections consisting of the first n
elements of this iterable collection, and the other elements.
Reuse: After calling this method, one should discard the iterator it was called on, and use only the iterators that were returned. Using the old iterator is undefined, subject to change, and may result in changes to the new iterators as well.
Returns a Stepper for the elements of this collection.
The Stepper enables creating a Java stream to operate on the collection, see scala.jdk.StreamConverters. For collections holding primitive values, the Stepper can be used as an iterator which doesn't box the elements.
The implicit StepperShape parameter defines the resulting Stepper type according to the element type of this collection.
Int
, Short
, Byte
or Char
, an IntStepper is returnedFor collections of Double
or Float
, a DoubleStepper is returnedFor collections of Long
a LongStepper is returnedFor any other element type, an AnyStepper is returnedNote that this method is overridden in subclasses and the return type is refined to S with EfficientSplit
, for example IndexedSeqOps.stepper. For Steppers marked with scala.collection.Stepper.EfficientSplit, the converters in scala.jdk.StreamConverters allow creating parallel streams, whereas bare Steppers can be converted only to sequential streams.
Tests whether this set is a subset of another set.
the set to test.
true
if this set is a subset of that
, i.e. if every element of this set is also an element of that
.
An iterator over all subsets of this set of the given size. If the requested size is impossible, an empty iterator is returned.
the size of the subsets.
the iterator.
Sums up the elements of this collection.
the result type of the +
operator.
an implicit parameter defining a set of numeric operations which includes the +
operator to be used in forming the sum.
the sum of all elements of this collection with respect to the +
operator in num
.
The rest of the collection without its first element.
Iterates over the tails of this iterable collection. The first value will be this iterable collection and the final one will be an empty iterable collection, with the intervening values the results of successive applications of tail
.
an iterator over all the tails of this iterable collection
List(1,2,3).tails = Iterator(List(1,2,3), List(2,3), List(3), Nil)
Selects the first n elements.
Note: might return different results for different runs, unless the underlying collection type is ordered.
the number of elements to take from this iterable collection.
a iterable collection consisting only of the first n
elements of this iterable collection, or else the whole iterable collection, if it has less than n
elements. If n
is negative, returns an empty iterable collection.
Reuse: After calling this method, one should discard the iterator it was called on, and use only the iterator that was returned. Using the old iterator is undefined, subject to change, and may result in changes to the new iterator as well.
Selects the last n elements.
Note: might return different results for different runs, unless the underlying collection type is ordered.
the number of elements to take from this iterable collection.
a iterable collection consisting only of the last n
elements of this iterable collection, or else the whole iterable collection, if it has less than n
elements. If n
is negative, returns an empty iterable collection.
Takes longest prefix of elements that satisfy a predicate.
Note: might return different results for different runs, unless the underlying collection type is ordered.
The predicate used to test elements.
the longest prefix of this iterable collection whose elements all satisfy the predicate p
.
Applies a side-effecting function to each element in this collection. Strict collections will apply f
to their elements immediately, while lazy collections like Views and LazyLists will only apply f
on each element if and when that element is evaluated, and each time that element is evaluated.
the return type of f
a function to apply to each element in this iterable collection
The same logical collection as this
Given a collection factory factory
, convert this collection to the appropriate representation for the current element type A
. Example uses:
xs.to(List) xs.to(ArrayBuffer) xs.to(BitSet) // for xs: Iterable[Int]
Convert collection to array.
This collection as an Iterable[A]
. No new collection will be built if this
is already an Iterable[A]
.
This collection as a Seq[A]
. This is equivalent to to(Seq)
but might be faster.
Creates a String representation of this object. The default representation is platform dependent. On the java platform it is the concatenation of the class name, "@", and the object's hashcode in hexadecimal.
a String representation of the object.
Transposes this iterable collection of iterable collections into a iterable collection of iterable collections.
The resulting collection's type will be guided by the static type of iterable collection. For example:
val xs = List( Set(1, 2, 3), Set(4, 5, 6)).transpose // xs == List( // List(1, 4), // List(2, 5), // List(3, 6)) val ys = Vector( List(1, 2, 3), List(4, 5, 6)).transpose // ys == Vector( // Vector(1, 4), // Vector(2, 5), // Vector(3, 6))
Note: Even when applied to a view or a lazy collection it will always force the elements.
the type of the elements of each iterable collection.
an implicit conversion which asserts that the element type of this iterable collection is an Iterable
.
a two-dimensional iterable collection of iterable collections which has as nth row the nth column of this iterable collection.
IllegalArgumentException
if all collections in this iterable collection are not of the same size.
Computes the union between of set and another set.
the set to form the union with.
a new set consisting of all elements that are in this set or in the given set that
.
Converts this iterable collection of pairs into two collections of the first and second half of each pair.
val xs = Iterable( (1, "one"), (2, "two"), (3, "three")).unzip // xs == (Iterable(1, 2, 3), // Iterable(one, two, three))
the type of the first half of the element pairs
the type of the second half of the element pairs
an implicit conversion which asserts that the element type of this iterable collection is a pair.
a pair of iterable collections, containing the first, respectively second half of each element pair of this iterable collection.
Converts this iterable collection of triples into three collections of the first, second, and third element of each triple.
val xs = Iterable( (1, "one", '1'), (2, "two", '2'), (3, "three", '3')).unzip3 // xs == (Iterable(1, 2, 3), // Iterable(one, two, three), // Iterable(1, 2, 3))
the type of the first member of the element triples
the type of the second member of the element triples
the type of the third member of the element triples
an implicit conversion which asserts that the element type of this iterable collection is a triple.
a triple of iterable collections, containing the first, second, respectively third member of each element triple of this iterable collection.
A view over the elements of this collection.
Creates a non-strict filter of this iterable collection.
Note: the difference between c filter p
and c withFilter p
is that the former creates a new collection, whereas the latter only restricts the domain of subsequent map
, flatMap
, foreach
, and withFilter
operations.
Note: might return different results for different runs, unless the underlying collection type is ordered.
the predicate used to test elements.
an object of class WithFilter
, which supports map
, flatMap
, foreach
, and withFilter
operations. All these operations apply to those elements of this iterable collection which satisfy the predicate p
.
Returns a iterable collection formed from this iterable collection and another iterable collection by combining corresponding elements in pairs. If one of the two collections is longer than the other, its remaining elements are ignored.
the type of the second half of the returned pairs
The iterable providing the second half of each result pair
a new iterable collection containing pairs consisting of corresponding elements of this iterable collection and that
. The length of the returned collection is the minimum of the lengths of this iterable collection and that
.
Returns a iterable collection formed from this iterable collection and another iterable collection by combining corresponding elements in pairs. If one of the two collections is shorter than the other, placeholder elements are used to extend the shorter collection to the length of the longer.
the iterable providing the second half of each result pair
the element to be used to fill up the result if this iterable collection is shorter than that
.
the element to be used to fill up the result if that
is shorter than this iterable collection.
a new collection of type That
containing pairs consisting of corresponding elements of this iterable collection and that
. The length of the returned collection is the maximum of the lengths of this iterable collection and that
. If this iterable collection is shorter than that
, thisElem
values are used to pad the result. If that
is shorter than this iterable collection, thatElem
values are used to pad the result.
Zips this iterable collection with its indices.
A new iterable collection containing pairs consisting of all elements of this iterable collection paired with their index. Indices start at 0
.
List("a", "b", "c").zipWithIndex == List(("a", 0), ("b", 1), ("c", 2))
Reuse: After calling this method, one should discard the iterator it was called on, and use only the iterator that was returned. Using the old iterator is undefined, subject to change, and may result in changes to the new iterator as well.
(abstractSet: any2stringadd[AbstractSet[A]]).+(other)
© 2002-2019 EPFL, with contributions from Lightbend.
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0.
https://www.scala-lang.org/api/2.13.0/scala/collection/AbstractSet.html
Explicit instantiation of the
Set
trait to reduce class file size in subclasses.