var set = TreeSet(5,4,3,2,1)
println(set)
val diffSet: TreeSet[Int] = set
// if I change above code to val diffSet: Set[Int] = set
// the result is unsorted set.
for (i <- diffSet; x = i) {
println(i)
}
println("-" * 20)
// the above code translates to below and print the same result
val temp = diffSet.map(i => (i, i))
for ((i, x) <- temp) {
println(i)
}
My question is if I defined a method like this:
def genSet:Set[Int] = {
TreeSet(5, 4, 3, 2, 1)
}
and when i want to use a for loop with it
for (i <- genSet; x = i + 1) {
println(x)
}
the result is unsorted, how to fix this behavior without change the genSet's return type. if I use for loop like below, it will be fine, but I hope to keep the above code style.
for (i <- genSet) {
val x = i + 1
println(x)
}
TreeSet. If you need ordering, then you want the static type to convey that the set will be sorted. If you'd notice that a functiondef f:Set[T]from a 3rd party lib happened to returnTreeSet[T], I'm sure you'd be reluctant to rely on this in your code as it would break if the library designer decided to change the instantiated type. Probably good idea to exercise the same discipline when calling your own code. – huynhjl Dec 30 '10 at 18:28