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I wanted to know when both of them are doing the same thing, what can be possible use cases to use the first one over the second statement.

    val xs = List[Int](1,2,3,4,5,6)

for a list of numbers :

    for (x <- xs if x%2 == 0) 
           yield x*10 

same as :

    xs.filter(_%2 == 0).map(_*10)

1 Answer 1

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I think that there is no performance difference. The code using the for loop under the hood will be translated into the code with filter and map (the details can varied depending on Scala version). It is matter of your preferences which version you want to use. See this answer for more details.

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  • Thanks :) What you think would happen if the operation is being performed on a spark RDD ? ( I mean , if xs is a RDD ? ) Feb 2, 2016 at 7:32
  • Translation of for loop into the code with map/for is performed by a compiler. It means that it should work in the same way regardless of what kind of collection is used. Feb 2, 2016 at 7:36
  • makes sense :) Thanks. Feb 2, 2016 at 7:39
  • AFAIK for comprehension would use withFilter instead of filter when desugared which avoids intermediate collection. See stackoverflow.com/questions/19617378/…
    – Łukasz
    Feb 2, 2016 at 10:34

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