I am not understanding the purpose of the following construction in Groovy.
Whenever you have a collection of stuff, call it items
, you can map over an attribute just by accessing that attribute on the collection, that is,
items.prop == items.collect { it.prop }
This looks weird to me, because I would think that the first notation actually meant that I want to access a property on the collection object itself. Real cases of ambiguity can happen, for instance
[[1,2,3],['cat', 'elephant']].size == 2
but according to the previous notation it should equal [3, 2]
.
Moreover, if the collect notation was not short enough, there is the *.
spread-dot operator which is meant to be used exactly in this way:
[[1,2,3],['cat', 'elephant']]*.size = [3, 2]
What is the purpose of the ambiguous dot notation? Was it just added to save on character over
*.
or it has legitimate cases of use where*.
would not work andcollect
would be cumbersome?
list.prop
syntax is unnecessary and makes things less explicit with no real gain (apart from a single*
). I cannot tell why it was added, but one can always opt not to use it :)