3

Say I have defined:

sealed trait ValidationResult
object Valid extends ValidationResult
case class Invalid(error:String) extends ValidationResult

Then I have a list which contains some validation results:

val results = List(Valid, Invalid("required username"), Valid)

I want to find the first one which has the type of Invalid:

results.find( ??? ) match {
    case Some(error) => println("Invalid: " + error)
    case _ => println("No error")
}

You can see there is a ??? in the find, but I don't know what shall I input there.

2 Answers 2

7
results.find {
  case Invalid(_) => true
  case _ => false
} match {
  case Some(Invalid(error)) => println("Invalid: " + error)
  case _ => println("No error")
}

or maybe:

results.collectFirst {
  case Invalid(error) => error
} match {
  case Some(error) => println("Invalid: " + error)
  case _ => println("No error")
}

Not needed as is, but I would convert Valid into a case object, in case you want to pattern-match it.

Note: both versions return the first error found. If you want to accumulate errors, then you need to filter and map (or fold).

1

Using list span,

val (v,inv) = results.span { _ match { 
    case Invalid(_) => false  
    case _ => true 
  } 
}

which returns

(v, inv) = (List(Valid),
            List(Invalid(required username), Valid))

In the resulting pair,

  • the first element is a list of all valid results occurring from the beginning of the list,
  • the second element is a list that starts with the first item that did not hold the predicate.

Thus we can extract the first invalid item with

if (inv.isEmpty) 
  Valid 
else 
  inv.head

res: Invalid(required username)

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