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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 and collect would be cumbersome?

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    I too find that the magic behind the 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 :)
    – epidemian
    Jul 6, 2012 at 18:30

1 Answer 1

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I wrote a blog post a while ago called "Groovy Spread Operator Optional For Properties" that dives into what's going on under the covers in this situation.

The short answer is, it's more syntactic sugar and eventually calls into DefaultGroovyMethods.getAt(Collection, String).

There aren't any huge advantages to it, but it could make some DSLs a little easier to write as they can operate correctly whether the object is a collection or a single object.

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    Yes, I had already read your post :-) But it does not explain why one should want such behaviour in the first place. I find it extremely confusing, so I wanted to hear some arguments why it was devised
    – Andrea
    Jul 6, 2012 at 17:14
  • For instance, can you give some examples of the DSL you mention that would benefit from this syntax?
    – Andrea
    Jul 7, 2012 at 7:50
  • Unfortunately the referenced post link is now broken.
    – dre
    Jun 14, 2018 at 13:27
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    Thanks to the wayback machine we can get to the blog post: web.archive.org/web/20170224073229/http://naleid.com/blog/2008/…
    – jdmuriel
    Feb 18, 2020 at 10:28

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