5

I'm trying to reduce a list of elements

List(1, 2, 3).map{n => <a>{n}</a>}.reduce{(a,b)=> a ++ b}

But I get this error

<console>:8: error: type mismatch;
 found   : scala.xml.NodeSeq
 required: scala.xml.Elem
       List(1, 2, 3).map{n => <a>{n}</a>}.reduce{(a,b)=> a ++ b}

How do I cast a NodeSeq to a Elem?

3 Answers 3

2

I wouldn't use reduce in this case. Instead, try foldLeft:

List(1, 2, 3).map{n => <a>{n}</a>}.foldLeft(NodeSeq.Empty){(a,b)=> a ++ b}

I have a whole blog post on map, reduce, and fold that may help if you're new to functional programming.

1

In addition to joescii's answer, you don't even need to use foldLeft to generate a sequence of nodes. Since List is already a sequence and Seq[Node] which is implicitly converted to NodeSeq you can just write the following:

val x : NodeSeq = List(1, 2, 3).map{n => <a>{n}</a>}

In addition, since the sequence of nodes is not a valid XML document (breaks single root element contract), you'd probably use this as a interim step in generating XML and subsequently wrap those nodes with some parent element.

If that's the case, than the explicit conversion to NodeSeq is unnecessary as it will be done implicitly as the example below demonstrates:

val x = List(1, 2, 3).map{n => <a>{n}</a>}
<b>{x}</b>
0

In addition to other answer, the simplest way to convert NodeSeq to Elem is:

val elemVar = nodeSeqVal(0)

It works if you are definitely sure that there are always the only Node in your NodeSeq, otherwise you lost the rest of the data.

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