When I use a val in a for-comprehension, I get the warning:
warning: val keyword in for comprehension is deprecated
despite the production in the syntax appendix of the spec.
This suggests that when I do something like
for (x <- xs; a = x)
I'm not really introducing a variable, such as if I do something like
for (x <- xs) yield { implicit val a = x; /* more */ }
where, as usual, the brace starts a new scope where I can introduce a new val, or even a new implicit.
What am I really doing with that a
?
Am I consuming stack space? Heap? Some other kind of alias?
Like an ordinary val pat = expr
definition, the thing to the left of the equals sign is just a pattern.
The Enumerator production in the syntax spec shows that the clause in a for-expr can be a generator (a <- b)
, guard if cond
or val def a = b
.
The parts that can be arbitrary expressions are b
(as given to the right of <-
and =
) and the condition.
Responder.exec
takes advantage of the conditional to execute arbitrary code, while evaluating trivially to true
.
That means you could do arbitrary side-effects from a conditional:
// yucky, yet instructive
scala> val xs = List(1,2,3)
scala> def bar(implicit i: Int) = Some(i+1)
scala> implicit var imp: Int = 0
scala> for { a<-xs; if { imp=a; true }; b<-bar } yield b
res6: List[Int] = List(2, 3, 4)
Similarly, the val def desugars as follows:
tmp <- xs
a = f(tmp) // some arbitrary function of tmp
// amounts to
(tmp, a) <- for (x@tmp <- xs) yield { val x0@a=f(tmp); (x, x0) }
Wait, really?
scala> def f(vs: List[Int]) = for (a <- vs; b = a+1) yield b
f: (vs: List[Int])List[Int]
You'll need a recent repl to do this:
scala> :javap f
[snip]
public scala.collection.immutable.List<java.lang.Object> f(scala.collection.immutable.List<java.lang.Object>);
flags: ACC_PUBLIC
Code:
stack=3, locals=2, args_size=2
0: aload_1
1: new #16 // class $anonfun$f$1
4: dup
5: invokespecial #17 // Method $anonfun$f$1."<init>":()V
8: getstatic #22 // Field scala/collection/immutable/List$.MODULE$:Lscala/collection/immutable/List$;
11: invokevirtual #26 // Method scala/collection/immutable/List$.canBuildFrom:()Lscala/collection/generic/CanBuildFrom;
14: invokeinterface #32, 3 // InterfaceMethod scala/collection/TraversableLike.map:(Lscala/Function1;Lscala/collection/generic/CanBuildFrom;)Ljava/lang/Object;
19: checkcast #28 // class scala/collection/TraversableLike
22: new #34 // class $anonfun$f$2
25: dup
26: invokespecial #35 // Method $anonfun$f$2."<init>":()V
29: getstatic #22 // Field scala/collection/immutable/List$.MODULE$:Lscala/collection/immutable/List$;
32: invokevirtual #26 // Method scala/collection/immutable/List$.canBuildFrom:()Lscala/collection/generic/CanBuildFrom;
35: invokeinterface #32, 3 // InterfaceMethod scala/collection/TraversableLike.map:(Lscala/Function1;Lscala/collection/generic/CanBuildFrom;)Ljava/lang/Object;
40: checkcast #37 // class scala/collection/immutable/List
43: areturn
I see two invocations of map, for the intermediate expression and for the yield.
On further inspection, the first anonfun is not a Int => Int
(i.e., a+1
) but a Int => (Int,Int)
.
So the val we introduced is just getting passed around as part of a tuple.