A Scala compiler plugin to give patterns and for-comprehensions the love they deserve
Scala 3.0.0 natively supports the semantic changes provided by better-monadic-for under -source:future compiler flag. The following code is considered valid under this flag:
for {
(x, given String) <- IO(42 -> "foo")
} yield s"$x${summon[String]}"There are no changes to map desugaring and value bindings inside fors still allocate tuples to my current knowledge. I don't currently have plans on rewriting plugin for Scala 3, however.
See changes: pattern bindings and contextual abstractions: pattern-bound given instances.
The plugin is available on Maven Central.
addCompilerPlugin("com.olegpy" %% "better-monadic-for" % "0.3.1")<plugin>
<groupId>net.alchim31.maven</groupId>
<artifactId>scala-maven-plugin</artifactId>
<configuration>
<compilerPlugins>
<compilerPlugin>
<groupId>com.olegpy</groupId>
<artifactId>better-monadic-for_2.13</artifactId>
<version>0.3.1</version>
</compilerPlugin>
</compilerPlugins>
</configuration>
</plugin>Supports Scala 2.11, 2.12, and 2.13.1
Available plugin options
All options have form of -P:bm4:$feature:$flag
| Feature | Flag (default) |
|---|---|
| Desugaring without withFilter | -P:bm4:no-filtering:y |
| Elimination of identity map | -P:bm4:no-map-id:y |
| Elimination of tuples in bindings | -P:bm4:no-tupling:y |
| Implicit definining patterns | -P:bm4:implicit-patterns:y |
Supported values for flags:
- Disabling:
n,no,0,false - Enabling:
y,yes,1,true
Changelog
| Version | Changes |
|---|---|
| 0.3.1 | Fix issues with wartremover, implicit patterns with = binds & Xplugin-list flag |
| 0.3.0-M4 | Fix anonymous variables in Scala 2.12.7+ |
| M2, M3 | Fixes for implicit patterns |
| 0.3.0-M1 | Initial implementation of implicit patterns |
| 0.2.4 | Fixed: incompatibility with Dsl.scala |
| 0.2.3 | Fixed: if-guards were broken when using untupling |
| 0.2.2 | Fixed: destructuring within for bindings (bar, baz) = foo |
| 0.2.1 | Fixed: untupling with -Ywarn-unused:locals causing warnings on e.g. _ = println(). |
| 0.2.0 | Added optimizations: map elimination & untupling. Added plugin options. |
| 0.1.0 | Initial version featuring for desugaring without withFilters. |
This plugin lets you do:
import cats.implicits._
import cats.effect.IO
def getCounts: IO[(Int, Int)] = ???
for {
(x, y) <- getCounts
} yield x + yWith regular Scala, this desugars to:
getCounts
.withFilter((@unchecked _) match {
case (x, y) => true
case _ => false
}
.map((@unchecked _) match {
case (x, y) => x + y
}Which fails to compile, because IO does not define withFilter
This plugin changes it to:
getCounts
.map(_ match { case (x, y) => x + y })Removing both withFilter and unchecked on generated map. So the code just works.
Additional Effects
Type ascriptions on left-hand side do not become an isInstanceOf check - which they do by default. E.g.
def getThing: IO[String] = ???
for {
x: String <- getCounts
} yield s"Count was $x"would desugar directly to
getCounts.map((x: String) => s"Count was $x")This also works with flatMap and foreach, of course.
This example is taken from Scala warts post by @lihaoyi
// Truncates 5
for((a, b) <- Seq(1 -> 2, 3 -> 4, 5)) yield a + " " + b
// Throws MatchError
Seq(1 -> 2, 3 -> 4, 5).map{case (a, b) => a + " " + b}With the plugin, both versions are equivalent and result in MatchError
Generators will now show exhaustivity warnings now whenever regular pattern matches would:
import cats.syntax.option._
for (Some(x) <- IO(none[Int])) yield xD:\Code\better-monadic-for\src\test\scala\com\olegpy\TestFor.scala:66
:22: match may not be exhaustive.
[warn] It would fail on the following input: None
[warn] for (Some(x) <- IO(none[Int])) yield x
[warn] ^
Eliminate calls to .map in comprehensions like this:
for {
x <- xs
y <- getYs(x)
} yield yStandard desugaring is
xs.flatMap(x => getYs(x).map(y => y))This plugin simplifies it to
xs.flatMap(x => getYs(x))Direct fix for lampepfl/dotty#2573.
If the binding is not used in follow-up withFilter, it is desugared as
plain vals, saving on allocations and primitive boxing.
Since version 0.3.0-M1, it is possible to define implicit values inside for-comprehensions using a new keyword implicit0:
case class ImplicitTest(id: String)
for {
x <- Option(42)
implicit0(it: ImplicitTest) <- Option(ImplicitTest("eggs"))
_ <- Option("dummy")
_ = "dummy"
_ = assert(implicitly[ImplicitTest] eq it)
} yield "ok"In current version (0.3.0) it's required to specify a type annotation in a pattern with implicit0.
It also works in regular match clauses:
(1, "foo", ImplicitTest("eggs")) match {
case (_, "foo", implicit0(it: ImplicitTest)) => assert(implicitly[ImplicitTest] eq it)
}- This plugin reserves one extra keyword,
implicit0, if corresponding option for implicit patterns is enabled (which is by default). - Regular
ifguards are not affected, only generator arrows.
MIT