Not a big fan of cluttering up my PATH
variable. I just symlink all my programs to /usr/local/bin, which is in the classpath. For example, if you downloaded scala and uncompress it in /opt/scala-2.9.0-1, run the following in the terminal.
ln -s /opt/scala-2.9.0-1/bin/scala /usr/local/bin
Now just type scala
in the terminal and you're all set.
This way you don't have to set your PATH
or change it when you have a new version of scala you want to try out. If you download a new version, you can uncompress it in any location and symlink the new version. Say you download version 2.9.1 and uncompress it in /opt/scala-2.9.1. You can type the following in the terminal
ln -s /opt/scala-2.9.1/bin/scala /usr/local/bin/scala2.9.1
Now, to use scala 2.9.1 you just run scala2.9.1
at the terminal.
When you are ready to switch to 2.9.1 fulltime, just update the symlink.
You could also add scaladoc, scalac, scalap and others in the same way
ln -s /opt/scala-2.9.0-1/bin/scalac /usr/local/bin
ln -s /opt/scala-2.9.0-1/bin/scalap /usr/local/bin
ln -s /opt/scala-2.9.0-1/bin/scaladoc /usr/local/bin
ln -s /opt/scala-2.9.0-1/bin/fsc /usr/local/bin
ln -s /opt/scala-2.9.0-1/bin/sbaz /usr/local/bin
ln -s /opt/scala-2.9.0-1/bin/sbaz-setup /usr/local/bin
brew install scala
and scala will be installed and ready to go. Not to mention all the other very cool things you can easily install with Homebrew. MacPorts or Fink may have something similar, but I prefer Homebrew.