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author | Jonathan Duran | 2012-07-17 11:42:09 -0700 |
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committer | Jonathan Duran | 2012-07-17 11:42:09 -0700 |
commit | b4b3e45d6684e77d361b4f8ca5be4889428320c5 (patch) | |
tree | 2156d9920ea1b7db49ed6460545fea7cda121bae /imports/codemirror/mode/clike/scala.html | |
parent | 4a87ff575693509ac578d46af26fa137c0dc3f58 (diff) | |
parent | 4f737b24c19ddc02d20f9783b8b080fc6ef11142 (diff) | |
download | ninja-b4b3e45d6684e77d361b4f8ca5be4889428320c5.tar.gz |
Merge branch 'refs/heads/NINJA-master' into TimelineUber
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1 | <!doctype html> | ||
2 | <html> | ||
3 | <head> | ||
4 | <title>CodeMirror: C-like mode</title> | ||
5 | <link rel="stylesheet" href="../../lib/codemirror.css"> | ||
6 | <link rel="stylesheet" href="../../theme/ambiance.css"> | ||
7 | <script src="../../lib/codemirror.js"></script> | ||
8 | <script src="clike.js"></script> | ||
9 | <link rel="stylesheet" href="../../doc/docs.css"> | ||
10 | <style> | ||
11 | body | ||
12 | { | ||
13 | margin: 0; | ||
14 | padding: 0; | ||
15 | max-width:inherit; | ||
16 | height: 100%; | ||
17 | } | ||
18 | html, form, .CodeMirror, .CodeMirror-scroll | ||
19 | { | ||
20 | height: 100%; | ||
21 | } | ||
22 | </style> | ||
23 | </head> | ||
24 | <body> | ||
25 | <form> | ||
26 | <textarea id="code" name="code"> | ||
27 | |||
28 | /* __ *\ | ||
29 | ** ________ ___ / / ___ Scala API ** | ||
30 | ** / __/ __// _ | / / / _ | (c) 2003-2011, LAMP/EPFL ** | ||
31 | ** __\ \/ /__/ __ |/ /__/ __ | http://scala-lang.org/ ** | ||
32 | ** /____/\___/_/ |_/____/_/ | | ** | ||
33 | ** |/ ** | ||
34 | \* */ | ||
35 | |||
36 | package scala.collection | ||
37 | |||
38 | import generic._ | ||
39 | import mutable.{ Builder, ListBuffer } | ||
40 | import annotation.{tailrec, migration, bridge} | ||
41 | import annotation.unchecked.{ uncheckedVariance => uV } | ||
42 | import parallel.ParIterable | ||
43 | |||
44 | /** A template trait for traversable collections of type `Traversable[A]`. | ||
45 | * | ||
46 | * $traversableInfo | ||
47 | * @define mutability | ||
48 | * @define traversableInfo | ||
49 | * This is a base trait of all kinds of $mutability Scala collections. It | ||
50 | * implements the behavior common to all collections, in terms of a method | ||
51 | * `foreach` with signature: | ||
52 | * {{{ | ||
53 | * def foreach[U](f: Elem => U): Unit | ||
54 | * }}} | ||
55 | * Collection classes mixing in this trait provide a concrete | ||
56 | * `foreach` method which traverses all the | ||
57 | * elements contained in the collection, applying a given function to each. | ||
58 | * They also need to provide a method `newBuilder` | ||
59 | * which creates a builder for collections of the same kind. | ||
60 | * | ||
61 | * A traversable class might or might not have two properties: strictness | ||
62 | * and orderedness. Neither is represented as a type. | ||
63 | * | ||
64 | * The instances of a strict collection class have all their elements | ||
65 | * computed before they can be used as values. By contrast, instances of | ||
66 | * a non-strict collection class may defer computation of some of their | ||
67 | * elements until after the instance is available as a value. | ||
68 | * A typical example of a non-strict collection class is a | ||
69 | * <a href="../immutable/Stream.html" target="ContentFrame"> | ||
70 | * `scala.collection.immutable.Stream`</a>. | ||
71 | * A more general class of examples are `TraversableViews`. | ||
72 | * | ||
73 | * If a collection is an instance of an ordered collection class, traversing | ||
74 | * its elements with `foreach` will always visit elements in the | ||
75 | * same order, even for different runs of the program. If the class is not | ||
76 | * ordered, `foreach` can visit elements in different orders for | ||
77 | * different runs (but it will keep the same order in the same run).' | ||
78 | * | ||
79 | * A typical example of a collection class which is not ordered is a | ||
80 | * `HashMap` of objects. The traversal order for hash maps will | ||
81 | * depend on the hash codes of its elements, and these hash codes might | ||
82 | * differ from one run to the next. By contrast, a `LinkedHashMap` | ||
83 | * is ordered because it's `foreach` method visits elements in the | ||
84 | * order they were inserted into the `HashMap`. | ||
85 | * | ||
86 | * @author Martin Odersky | ||
87 | * @version 2.8 | ||
88 | * @since 2.8 | ||
89 | * @tparam A the element type of the collection | ||
90 | * @tparam Repr the type of the actual collection containing the elements. | ||
91 | * | ||
92 | * @define Coll Traversable | ||
93 | * @define coll traversable collection | ||
94 | */ | ||
95 | trait TraversableLike[+A, +Repr] extends HasNewBuilder[A, Repr] | ||
96 | with FilterMonadic[A, Repr] | ||
97 | with TraversableOnce[A] | ||
98 | with GenTraversableLike[A, Repr] | ||
99 | with Parallelizable[A, ParIterable[A]] | ||
100 | { | ||
101 | self => | ||
102 | |||
103 | import Traversable.breaks._ | ||
104 | |||
105 | /** The type implementing this traversable */ | ||
106 | protected type Self = Repr | ||
107 | |||
108 | /** The collection of type $coll underlying this `TraversableLike` object. | ||
109 | * By default this is implemented as the `TraversableLike` object itself, | ||
110 | * but this can be overridden. | ||
111 | */ | ||
112 | def repr: Repr = this.asInstanceOf[Repr] | ||
113 | |||
114 | /** The underlying collection seen as an instance of `$Coll`. | ||
115 | * By default this is implemented as the current collection object itself, | ||
116 | * but this can be overridden. | ||
117 | */ | ||
118 | protected[this] def thisCollection: Traversable[A] = this.asInstanceOf[Traversable[A]] | ||
119 | |||
120 | /** A conversion from collections of type `Repr` to `$Coll` objects. | ||
121 | * By default this is implemented as just a cast, but this can be overridden. | ||
122 | */ | ||
123 | protected[this] def toCollection(repr: Repr): Traversable[A] = repr.asInstanceOf[Traversable[A]] | ||
124 | |||
125 | /** Creates a new builder for this collection type. | ||
126 | */ | ||
127 | protected[this] def newBuilder: Builder[A, Repr] | ||
128 | |||
129 | protected[this] def parCombiner = ParIterable.newCombiner[A] | ||
130 | |||
131 | /** Applies a function `f` to all elements of this $coll. | ||
132 | * | ||
133 | * Note: this method underlies the implementation of most other bulk operations. | ||
134 | * It's important to implement this method in an efficient way. | ||
135 | * | ||
136 | * | ||
137 | * @param f the function that is applied for its side-effect to every element. | ||
138 | * The result of function `f` is discarded. | ||
139 | * | ||
140 | * @tparam U the type parameter describing the result of function `f`. | ||
141 | * This result will always be ignored. Typically `U` is `Unit`, | ||
142 | * but this is not necessary. | ||
143 | * | ||
144 | * @usecase def foreach(f: A => Unit): Unit | ||
145 | */ | ||
146 | def foreach[U](f: A => U): Unit | ||
147 | |||
148 | /** Tests whether this $coll is empty. | ||
149 | * | ||
150 | * @return `true` if the $coll contain no elements, `false` otherwise. | ||
151 | */ | ||
152 | def isEmpty: Boolean = { | ||
153 | var result = true | ||
154 | breakable { | ||
155 | for (x <- this) { | ||
156 | result = false | ||
157 | break | ||
158 | } | ||
159 | } | ||
160 | result | ||
161 | } | ||
162 | |||
163 | /** Tests whether this $coll is known to have a finite size. | ||
164 | * All strict collections are known to have finite size. For a non-strict collection | ||
165 | * such as `Stream`, the predicate returns `true` if all elements have been computed. | ||
166 | * It returns `false` if the stream is not yet evaluated to the end. | ||
167 | * | ||
168 | * Note: many collection methods will not work on collections of infinite sizes. | ||
169 | * | ||
170 | * @return `true` if this collection is known to have finite size, `false` otherwise. | ||
171 | */ | ||
172 | def hasDefiniteSize = true | ||
173 | |||
174 | def ++[B >: A, That](that: GenTraversableOnce[B])(implicit bf: CanBuildFrom[Repr, B, That]): That = { | ||
175 | val b = bf(repr) | ||
176 | if (that.isInstanceOf[IndexedSeqLike[_, _]]) b.sizeHint(this, that.seq.size) | ||
177 | b ++= thisCollection | ||
178 | b ++= that.seq | ||
179 | b.result | ||
180 | } | ||
181 | |||
182 | @bridge | ||
183 | def ++[B >: A, That](that: TraversableOnce[B])(implicit bf: CanBuildFrom[Repr, B, That]): That = | ||
184 | ++(that: GenTraversableOnce[B])(bf) | ||
185 | |||
186 | /** Concatenates this $coll with the elements of a traversable collection. | ||
187 | * It differs from ++ in that the right operand determines the type of the | ||
188 | * resulting collection rather than the left one. | ||
189 | * | ||
190 | * @param that the traversable to append. | ||
191 | * @tparam B the element type of the returned collection. | ||
192 | * @tparam That $thatinfo | ||
193 | * @param bf $bfinfo | ||
194 | * @return a new collection of type `That` which contains all elements | ||
195 | * of this $coll followed by all elements of `that`. | ||
196 | * | ||
197 | * @usecase def ++:[B](that: TraversableOnce[B]): $Coll[B] | ||
198 | * | ||
199 | * @return a new $coll which contains all elements of this $coll | ||
200 | * followed by all elements of `that`. | ||
201 | */ | ||
202 | def ++:[B >: A, That](that: TraversableOnce[B])(implicit bf: CanBuildFrom[Repr, B, That]): That = { | ||
203 | val b = bf(repr) | ||
204 | if (that.isInstanceOf[IndexedSeqLike[_, _]]) b.sizeHint(this, that.size) | ||
205 | b ++= that | ||
206 | b ++= thisCollection | ||
207 | b.result | ||
208 | } | ||
209 | |||
210 | /** This overload exists because: for the implementation of ++: we should reuse | ||
211 | * that of ++ because many collections override it with more efficient versions. | ||
212 | * Since TraversableOnce has no '++' method, we have to implement that directly, | ||
213 | * but Traversable and down can use the overload. | ||
214 | */ | ||
215 | def ++:[B >: A, That](that: Traversable[B])(implicit bf: CanBuildFrom[Repr, B, That]): That = | ||
216 | (that ++ seq)(breakOut) | ||