I just wanted to explore the behaviors of the iterators of a String
object and a List[Int]
object in REPL and the tests are as shown below:
scala> val list = List(1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16)
list: List[Int] = List(1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16)
scala> val itL = list.iterator
itL: Iterator[Int] = non-empty iterator
scala> List(8,5,list.size-13).map(itL.take(_).mkString)
res85: List[String] = List(12345678, 910111213, 141516)
scala> val st = "abcdefghijklmnop"
st: String = abcdefghijklmnop
scala> val itS = st.iterator
itS: Iterator[Char] = non-empty iterator
scala> List(8,5,st.size-13).map(itS.take(_).mkString)
res84: List[String] = List(abcdefgh, abcde, abc)
Why the iterators are behaving differently? My expected output in String
object's case is:
List[String] = List(abcdefgh, ijklm, nop)
Can somebody explain this if possible with examples.
Another Observation is: The behaviour of the iterator of the Range
object is also exactly similar to String
object
as seen below:
scala> val x = (1 to 16)
x: scala.collection.immutable.Range.Inclusive = Range 1 to 16
scala> val t = (1 to 16).iterator
t: Iterator[Int] = non-empty iterator
scala> List(8,5,x.size-13).map(t.take(_).mkString)
res103: List[String] = List(12345678, 12345, 123)
If the Range
is converted to List
or Set
the respective iterators are behaving exactly as per my expectation always:
scala> val x1 = (1 to 16).toList
x1: List[Int] = List(1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16)
scala> val t1 = x1.iterator
t1: Iterator[Int] = non-empty iterator
scala> List(8,5,x1.size-13).map(t1.take(_).mkString)
res104: List[String] = List(12345678, 910111213, 141516)
scala> val x2 = (1 to 16).toSet
x2: scala.collection.immutable.Set[Int] = Set(5, 10, 14, 1, 6, 9, 13, 2, 12, 7, 3, 16, 11, 8, 4, 15)
scala> val t2 = x2.iterator
t2: Iterator[Int] = non-empty iterator
scala> List(8,5,x2.size-13).map(t2.take(_).mkString)
res105: List[String] = List(51014169132, 12731611, 8415)
List
,String
,Range
, orSet
, you're doing the same thing with theIterator
, invoking thetake()
method multiple times. The documentation warns against that and says you'll get "undefined" results. It's no surprise you're seeing inconsistent output.