I encountered andThen, but did not properly understand it.
To look at it further, I read the Function1.andThen docs
def andThen[A](g: (R) ⇒ A): (T1) ⇒ A mm is a MultiMap instance.
scala> mm res29: scala.collection.mutable.HashMap[Int,scala.collection.mutable.Set[String]] with scala.collection.mutable.MultiMap[Int,String] = Map(2 -> Set(b) , 1 -> Set(c, a)) scala> mm.keys.toList.sortWith(_ < _).map(mm.andThen(_.toList)) res26: List[List[String]] = List(List(c, a), List(b)) scala> mm.keys.toList.sortWith(_ < _).map(x => mm.apply(x).toList) res27: List[List[String]] = List(List(c, a), List(b)) Note - code from DSLs in Action
Is andThen powerful? Based on this example, it looks like mm.andThen de-sugars to x => mm.apply(x). If there is a deeper meaning of andThen, then I haven’t understood it yet.
1 Answer
andThen is just function composition. Given a function f
val f: String => Int = s => s.length andThen creates a new function which applies f followed by the argument function
val g: Int => Int = i => i * 2 val h = f.andThen(g) h(x) is then g(f(x))