How to combine Option values in Scala?

故事扮演 提交于 2019-11-30 06:55:52

问题


I want to be able to apply an operation f: (T,T) => T to Option[T] values in Scala. I want the result to be None if any of the two values is None.

More specifically, I want to know if there is a shorter way to do the following:

def opt_apply[T](f: (T,T) => T, x: Option[T], y: Option[T]): Option[T] = {
  (x,y) match {
    case (Some(u),Some(v)) => Some(f(u,v))
    case _ => None
  }
}

I have tryied (x zip y) map {case (u,v) => f(u,v)} but the result is an Iterator[T] not an Option[T].


回答1:


scala> val (x, y) = (Some(4), Some(9))
x: Some[Int] = Some(4)
y: Some[Int] = Some(9)

scala> def f(x: Int, y: Int) = Math.max(x, y)
f: (x: Int,y: Int)Int

scala> for { x0 <- x; y0 <- y } yield f(x0, y0)
res26: Option[Int] = Some(9)

scala> val x = None
x: None.type = None

scala> for { x0 <- x; y0 <- y } yield f(x0, y0)
res27: Option[Int] = None



回答2:


@RahulG's answer exploits the fact that Option is a monad (even though there is no type to represent this in the Scala library). The compiler expands the for comprehension to the following:

def a: Option[Int]
def b: Option[Int]
val calc: Option[Int] = a flatMap {aa => b map {bb => aa + bb}}

You can also treat it as an applicative functor, with some help from Scalaz:

import scalaz._
import Scalaz._

def a: Option[Int]
def b: Option[Int]
val calc: Option[Int] = (a ⊛ b) {_ + _}

A key difference is that in the monadic calculation, a failure (that is, None) of calculation a short circuits the evaluation. In the applicative style, both a and b are evaluated, and if both are Somes, the pure function is called. You can also see that in the monadic calculation, the value aa could have been used in the calculation b; in the applicative version, b cannot depend on the result of a.




回答3:


I have a slightly older version of scalaz than retronym but the following works for me as an example and is generalizable for the case where you have 3 types T, U, V and not just one:

def main(args: Array[String]) {
  import scalaz._
  import Scalaz._

  val opt1 = some(4.0) //Option[Double]
  val opt2 = some(3)   //Option[Int]

  val f: (Double, Int) => String = (d, i) => "[%d and %.2f]".format(i, d)

  val res = (opt1 <|*|> opt2).map(f.tupled)
  println(res) //Some([3 and 4.00])
}

I can then add:

val opt3 = none[Int]
val res2 = (opt1 <|*|> opt3).map(f.tupled)
println(res2) //None



回答4:


You can use for comprehensions:

def opt_apply[T](f: (T,T) => T, x: Option[T], y: Option[T]): Option[T] = 
     for (xp <- x; yp <- y) yield (f(xp,yp))

Which is sugar for:

x flatMap {xp => y map {yp => f(xp, yp)}}

This is also possible due to Option being a Monad




回答5:


def optApply[A,B,C](f: (A, B) => C, a: Option[A], b: Option[B]): Option[C] =
  a.zip(b).headOption.map { tup => f.tupled(tup) }

a.zip(b) does result in an Iterable[(A, B)] (with, because it's from Options, at most one element). headOption then returns the first element as an Option.




回答6:


Starting Scala 2.13, Option#zip can be applied to another Option to return an Option (in earlier versions, it would have returned an Iterable); thus:

def optApply[T](f: (T,T) => T, a: Option[T], b: Option[T]): Option[T] =
  a.zip(b).map(f.tupled)

where the behavior of zip is:

Some(2).zip(Some(3)) // Some((2, 3))
Some(2).zip(None)    // None
None.zip(Some(3))    // None
None.zip(None)       // None

and which can be applied as such:

optApply[Int]((a, b) => a max b, Some(2), Some(5)) // Some(5)
optApply[Int]((a, b) => a max b, Some(2), None)    // None


来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/2712390/how-to-combine-option-values-in-scala

易学教程内所有资源均来自网络或用户发布的内容,如有违反法律规定的内容欢迎反馈
该文章没有解决你所遇到的问题?点击提问,说说你的问题,让更多的人一起探讨吧!