trait AsScalaConverters extends AnyRef
Defines converter methods from Java to Scala collections.
- Source
- AsScalaConverters.scala
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def
asScalaBuffer[A](l: java.util.List[A]): Buffer[A]
Converts a Java
List
to a Scala mutableBuffer
.Converts a Java
List
to a Scala mutableBuffer
.The returned Scala
Buffer
is backed by the provided JavaList
and any side-effects of using it via the Scala interface will be visible via the Java interface and vice versa.If the Java
List
was previously obtained from an implicit or explicit call ofJavaConverters.bufferAsJavaList(scala.collection.mutable.Buffer)
then the original ScalaBuffer
will be returned.- l
The Java
List
to be converted.- returns
A Scala mutable
Buffer
view of the argument.
-
def
asScalaIterator[A](i: java.util.Iterator[A]): Iterator[A]
Converts a Java
Iterator
to a ScalaIterator
.Converts a Java
Iterator
to a ScalaIterator
.The returned Scala
Iterator
is backed by the provided JavaIterator
and any side-effects of using it via the Scala interface will be visible via the Java interface and vice versa.If the Java
Iterator
was previously obtained from an implicit or explicit call ofJavaConverters.asJavaIterator(scala.collection.Iterator)
then the original ScalaIterator
will be returned.- i
The Java
Iterator
to be converted.- returns
A Scala
Iterator
view of the argument.
-
def
asScalaSet[A](s: java.util.Set[A]): mutable.Set[A]
Converts a Java
Set
to a Scala mutableSet
.Converts a Java
Set
to a Scala mutableSet
.The returned Scala
Set
is backed by the provided JavaSet
and any side-effects of using it via the Scala interface will be visible via the Java interface and vice versa.If the Java
Set
was previously obtained from an implicit or explicit call ofJavaConverters.mutableSetAsJavaSet(scala.collection.mutable.Set)
then the original ScalaSet
will be returned.- s
The Java
Set
to be converted.- returns
A Scala mutable
Set
view of the argument.
-
def
collectionAsScalaIterable[A](i: Collection[A]): Iterable[A]
Converts a Java
Collection
to an ScalaIterable
.Converts a Java
Collection
to an ScalaIterable
.If the Java
Collection
was previously obtained from an implicit or explicit call ofJavaConverters.asJavaCollection(scala.collection.Iterable)
then the original ScalaIterable
will be returned.- i
The Java
Collection
to be converted.- returns
A Scala
Iterable
view of the argument.
-
def
dictionaryAsScalaMap[A, B](p: Dictionary[A, B]): mutable.Map[A, B]
Converts a Java
Dictionary
to a Scala mutableMap
.Converts a Java
Dictionary
to a Scala mutableMap
.The returned Scala
Map
is backed by the provided JavaDictionary
and any side-effects of using it via the Scala interface will be visible via the Java interface and vice versa.If the Java
Dictionary
was previously obtained from an implicit or explicit call ofJavaConverters.asJavaDictionary(scala.collection.mutable.Map)
then the original ScalaMap
will be returned.- p
The Java
Dictionary
to be converted.- returns
A Scala mutable
Map
view of the argument.
-
def
enumerationAsScalaIterator[A](i: java.util.Enumeration[A]): Iterator[A]
Converts a Java
Enumeration
to a ScalaIterator
.Converts a Java
Enumeration
to a ScalaIterator
.The returned Scala
Iterator
is backed by the provided JavaEnumeration
and any side-effects of using it via the Scala interface will be visible via the Java interface and vice versa.If the Java
Enumeration
was previously obtained from an implicit or explicit call ofJavaConverters.asJavaEnumeration(scala.collection.Iterator)
then the original ScalaIterator
will be returned.- i
The Java
Enumeration
to be converted.- returns
A Scala
Iterator
view of the argument.
-
def
iterableAsScalaIterable[A](i: java.lang.Iterable[A]): Iterable[A]
Converts a Java
Iterable
to a ScalaIterable
.Converts a Java
Iterable
to a ScalaIterable
.The returned Scala
Iterable
is backed by the provided JavaIterable
and any side-effects of using it via the Scala interface will be visible via the Java interface and vice versa.If the Java
Iterable
was previously obtained from an implicit or explicit call ofJavaConverters.asJavaIterable(scala.collection.Iterable) then the original Scala
Iterable
will be returned.- i
The Java
Iterable
to be converted.- returns
A Scala
Iterable
view of the argument.
-
def
mapAsScalaConcurrentMap[A, B](m: ConcurrentMap[A, B]): concurrent.Map[A, B]
Converts a Java
ConcurrentMap
to a Scala mutableConcurrentMap
.Converts a Java
ConcurrentMap
to a Scala mutableConcurrentMap
.The returned Scala
ConcurrentMap
is backed by the provided JavaConcurrentMap
and any side-effects of using it via the Scala interface will be visible via the Java interface and vice versa.If the Java
ConcurrentMap
was previously obtained from an implicit or explicit call ofJavaConverters.mapAsJavaConcurrentMap(scala.collection.mutable.ConcurrentMap)
then the original ScalaConcurrentMap
will be returned.- m
The Java
ConcurrentMap
to be converted.- returns
A Scala mutable
ConcurrentMap
view of the argument.
-
def
mapAsScalaMap[A, B](m: java.util.Map[A, B]): mutable.Map[A, B]
Converts a Java
Map
to a Scala mutableMap
.Converts a Java
Map
to a Scala mutableMap
.The returned Scala
Map
is backed by the provided JavaMap
and any side-effects of using it via the Scala interface will be visible via the Java interface and vice versa.If the Java
Map
was previously obtained from an implicit or explicit call ofJavaConverters.mutableMapAsJavaMap(scala.collection.mutable.Map)
then the original ScalaMap
will be returned.If the wrapped map is synchronized (e.g. from
java.util.Collections.synchronizedMap
), it is your responsibility to wrap all non-atomic operations withunderlying.synchronized
. This includesget
, asjava.util.Map
's API does not allow for an atomicget
whennull
values may be present.- m
The Java
Map
to be converted.- returns
A Scala mutable
Map
view of the argument.
-
def
propertiesAsScalaMap(p: Properties): mutable.Map[String, String]
Converts a Java
Properties
to a Scala mutableMap[String, String]
.Converts a Java
Properties
to a Scala mutableMap[String, String]
.The returned Scala
Map[String, String]
is backed by the provided JavaProperties
and any side-effects of using it via the Scala interface will be visible via the Java interface and vice versa.- p
The Java
Properties
to be converted.- returns
A Scala mutable
Map[String, String]
view of the argument.
This is the documentation for the Scala standard library.
Package structure
The scala package contains core types like
Int
,Float
,Array
orOption
which are accessible in all Scala compilation units without explicit qualification or imports.Notable packages include:
scala.collection
and its sub-packages contain Scala's collections frameworkscala.collection.immutable
- Immutable, sequential data-structures such asVector
,List
,Range
,HashMap
orHashSet
scala.collection.mutable
- Mutable, sequential data-structures such asArrayBuffer
,StringBuilder
,HashMap
orHashSet
scala.collection.concurrent
- Mutable, concurrent data-structures such asTrieMap
scala.collection.parallel.immutable
- Immutable, parallel data-structures such asParVector
,ParRange
,ParHashMap
orParHashSet
scala.collection.parallel.mutable
- Mutable, parallel data-structures such asParArray
,ParHashMap
,ParTrieMap
orParHashSet
scala.concurrent
- Primitives for concurrent programming such asFutures
andPromises
scala.io
- Input and output operationsscala.math
- Basic math functions and additional numeric types likeBigInt
andBigDecimal
scala.sys
- Interaction with other processes and the operating systemscala.util.matching
- Regular expressionsOther packages exist. See the complete list on the right.
Additional parts of the standard library are shipped as separate libraries. These include:
scala.reflect
- Scala's reflection API (scala-reflect.jar)scala.xml
- XML parsing, manipulation, and serialization (scala-xml.jar)scala.swing
- A convenient wrapper around Java's GUI framework called Swing (scala-swing.jar)scala.util.parsing
- Parser combinators (scala-parser-combinators.jar)Automatic imports
Identifiers in the scala package and the
scala.Predef
object are always in scope by default.Some of these identifiers are type aliases provided as shortcuts to commonly used classes. For example,
List
is an alias forscala.collection.immutable.List
.Other aliases refer to classes provided by the underlying platform. For example, on the JVM,
String
is an alias forjava.lang.String
.