Well, in Scala you can actually say:
val lines = scala.io.Source.fromFile("file.txt").mkString
But this is just a library sugar. See Read entire file in Scala? for other possiblities. What you are actually asking is how to apply functional paradigm to this problem. Here is a hint:
Source.fromFile("file.txt").getLines().foreach {println}
Do you get the idea behind this? foreach line in the file execute println function. BTW don't worry, getLines() returns an iterator, not the whole file. Now something more serious:
lines filter {_.startsWith("ab")} map {_.toUpperCase} foreach {println}
See the idea? Take lines (it can be an array, list, set, iterator, whatever that can be filtered and which contains an items having startsWith method) and filter taking only the items starting with "ab". Now take every item and map it by applying toUpperCase method. Finally foreach resulting item print it.
The last thought: you are not limited to a single type. For instance say you have a file containing integer number, one per line. If you want to read that file, parse the number and sum them up, simply say:
lines.map(_.toInt).sum
O(n^2)operation! (Formally it is; optimizations might save you, but don't count on it.) So this isn't a good way to write even imperative code unless your files are tiny. (You'd useStringBuilderinstead as the accumulator.) – Rex Kerr Aug 13 '11 at 19:30+=as Strings are immutable? – Christina Brooks Aug 13 '11 at 20:22s1 + s2it has to create an entirely new string of sizes1.size + s2.size, at proportional cost. Whereas when you append something to aStringBuilder, you don't have to pay again for the current contents of theStringBuilder(amortized cost, anyway). – Kipton Barros Aug 13 '11 at 20:43