5

I have an expression returning an object, and I want to invoke a method on the resulting object only if a certain boolean condition is true. I want to get the result (whether the object, or the result of invoking the method on the object) in a val.

One way is to use a temporary var, such as in the following example, in which List(3, 1, 2) is the (potentially complicated) expression returning an object, list is the temporary var, and .sorted is the method I want to conditionally invoke:

import scala.util.Random

val condition = Random.nextBoolean
val result = {      
  var list = List(3, 1, 2);
  if (condition) list = list.sorted
  list
}

What would be the canonical way to do this, perhaps without using a temporary var?

Note that

if (condition) List(3, 1, 2).sorted else List(3, 1, 2)

is not quite satisfactory because List(3, 1, 2) may in general be a complicated expression that I don't want to repeat.

Here is one method I found that unfortunately involves giving explicit types (and is longer and more complicated than introducing a temporary var as above):

val condition = Random.nextBoolean
val result =
  (
    if (condition)
      {l: List[Int] => l.sorted}
    else
      identity(_: List[Int])
  ).apply(List(3, 1, 2))

I suspect there must be a tidier way that I have failed to recognize.

Update: A slightly less ugly method that unfortunately still requires explicit type information:

val condition = Random.nextBoolean    
val result = {
    l: List[Int] => if (condition) l.sorted else l
  }.apply(List(3, 1, 2))
4
  • 2
    Is it really worth all the circumlocution to avoid a temporary value? (And you don't need to use a var, just an if / else.) Apr 5, 2013 at 2:12
  • 1
    @RandallSchulz Not necessarily, of course. But ideally, I would like to avoid both the explicit type information and the long-winded solution involving a temporary value! sschaef has shown below that, if the forward pipe operator is available, this is possible. Apr 5, 2013 at 14:36
  • It's pretty hard for me to see how any of the alternatives proffered are in any way preferable to the simplest form you showed in your question (the first one). Apr 5, 2013 at 14:51
  • sschaef's alternative is preferable in one way at least: it is ~1 line (assuming |> is available) instead of ~3. Apr 5, 2013 at 18:13

2 Answers 2

11

You can use the forward pipe operator:

implicit class PipedObject[A](value: A) {
  def |>[B](f: A => B): B = f(value)
}

scala> List(3, 1, 2) |> (xs => if (true) xs.sorted else xs)
res1: List[Int] = List(1, 2, 3)
2
  • Ah! I was wondering if such a "postfix function application" operator existed in Scala. (Any idea if it will be built-in at some point?) Apr 4, 2013 at 23:09
  • I don't know but at the moment there are no discussions to include it to the stdlib.
    – kiritsuku
    Apr 4, 2013 at 23:11
5

Starting Scala 2.13, the standard library now provides the chaining operation pipe which can be used to convert/pipe a value with a function of interest, and thus avoids an intermediate variable:

import scala.util.chaining._

List(3, 1, 2).pipe(list => if (condition) list.sorted else list)

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