Q1. Scala bytecode can run on top of Java VM. What is the fundamental difference between Java object.clone() and Scala object.copy()?
- One is a Java object, the other is a Scala object.
- clone() will copy class structures but not the data, while copy() will also copy data into new objects.
- There is no difference.
- copy() allows you to change values during the copying process; clone() does not.
val m1 = Map("a"->1,"b"->2,"c"->3)
m1("a")
- a
- 2
- b
- 1
- monads
- literal functions
- partially applied functions
- parallel collections
- ArgumentExceptions
- AssertionException
- DiagrammedAssertions
- JUnit
Q5. What data type would you use to store an immutable collection of objects that contain a fixed number of varying types?
- Array
- ImmutableCollection
- List
- Tuple
Q6. After defining a function in the interpreter, Scala returns the following. What does the ()
indicate?
myfnc: ()Unit
- The function has no side effects.
- The function takes no parameters.
- The function returns no value.
- Returning unit types to the function is a closures.
- hexadecimal
- short
- floating point
- long
Q8. When you convert a map to a list using the toList
method of the map, the result will be of which type?
-
List[(String, String)]
-
List[(Array, Array)]
-
List[(Collection, Collection)]
-
List
val x = (1234, "Active")
- List
- Map
- Tuple
- Array
- AnyVal
- AnyRef
- Method
- Null
Null in Scala Standard library. The question is a bit incorrect - Null is a subtype of every type except those of value classes
- Yes and no. It is different depending on the for construct and what it does.
- Yes, because the for section does not expose its scope.
- No, because for-yield shares the same scope, even though they are within separate curly braces.
- Yes, because they are within different curly braces.
Example: yield-body has access to the e
variable from the for-body
val a = Array(1, 2, 3, 4, 5)
for {
e <- a if e > 2
} yield e
- using regex
- using monads
- using string matching
- using case classes
Note: ambiguous question, it's not clear what kind of pattern matching is meant here.
val y = List('a','b')
val z = y::List('c')
- List(a,b,c)
- List(List(a, b), c)
- List(c,a,b)
- List(c,List(a,b))
- assert
- require
- precondition
- mustHave
Q15. Which Scala type may throw an exception or a successfully computed value, and is commonly used to trap and propagate errors?
-
scala.util.ExceptionHandling
-
scala.Catch.Throw
-
scala.exception.TryFinally
-
scala.util.Try
val y = (math floor 3.1415 * 2)
- short
- double
- int
- bigInt
-
%
-
_
-
^
-
-
Q18. You have created an array using val. Can you change the value of any element of the array—and why or why not?
- Yes, the reference to the array is immutable, so the location that the array points to is immutable. The values in the array are mutable.
- The 0th element is immutable and cannot be modified. All other elements can be modified.
- Yes, val does not make arrays immutable.
- No, val makes the array and values of the array immutable.
Explanation:
val a1 = Array(1, 2, 3)
a1{1} = 3 // OK
a1 = Array(1, 3, 3) // error: reassignment to val
def main () {
var a = 0
for (a<-1 until 5){println(a)}
- 1,2,3,4,5
- 0,1,2,3,4
- 1,2,3,4
- 2,3,4,5
- singletons
- stationary objects
- functional objects
- fixed objects
Note: singletons may have mutable state
- use array named args
- use tuple named args
- use numbered variables with a _ prefix for example _ 1, _ 2, _ 3
- use numbered variables with a $ prefix - for example $1, $2, $3
- 4
- an error
- 6
- 3
val MyFuture = Future {runBackgroundFunction() }
- myFuture.onComplete
- myFuture(status)
- myFuture.Finished
- complete(myFuture)
-
%
-
&
-
_
-
-
- polyinheritance
- multilevel inheritance
- multimode inheritance
- hierarchical inheritance
Q26. One way to improve code reliability is to use __
, which will evaluate a condition and return an error if the condition is violated.
- packages
- polymorphisms
- assertions
- traits
- If the first else-if does not succeed, then no other else-ifs are tested.
- If an else-if does not succeed, then none of the remaining else-if statements or elses will be tested.
- All else-if statements are tested in all cases.
- If an else-if succeeds, then none of the remaining else-if statements or elses will tested.
- recursive methods
- currying methods
- redefining methods
- overriding methods
-
_
-
*
-
%
-
&
myClass.foreach(println _)
-
myClass.foreach(println ())
-
myClass.foreach(print NIL)
-
myClass.loop(println ())
-
myClass.foreach(x => println(x))
- Immutable objects use less memory than their mutable counterparts.
- Immutable objects do not require error handling.
- Immutable objects can be used in classes, mutable objects cannot.
- Immutable objects are threadsafe.
Q32. You want to create an iteration loop that tests the condition at the end of the loop body. Which iteration would you use?
- do-while loop
- while loop
- for loop
- do-until loop
Q33. What can you use to make querying a database more efficient, by avoiding the need to parse the SQL string every time a query is executed from Scala?
- database driver
- connection
- prepared statement
- SQL view
PreparedStatement from Java which is also used in Scala
- Set
- Seq
- Hash
- Map
- use
- include
- import
- assertion
- %
- DIV
- //
- /
- method
- fields and methods
- fields, methods, and packages
- fields
- singleton
- assertion
- trait
- monad
- when the function has no side effects
- when the function returns a Unit type
- when the function is recursive
- when the function has side effects
- so only methods in the same file can access the field
- so only methods in the same package can access the field
- so only methods in the same class could access the field
- so only methods defined in a Java class can access the field
- They do the exact same thing
-
==
won't work on objects -
==
cannot be applied toString
-
==
is a wrapper of.equals()
and checks for nulls
- ||
- &&
- &
- %
- private function
- block function
- local function
- method
A function defined within a block of code, such as within a method or another function, is called a local function. This is because it is only visible and accessible within the scope of the block in which it is defined, and is not accessible outside of that block.
- multimode method
- polymorphic method
- closure
- collection method
- IllegalArgumentException
- NumberFormatException
- NullPointerExcepetion
- MalformedParameterException
- a constraint on where a method may be called from
- a constraint on values passed to a methode constructor
- a class of predifined error messages
- a class of Boolean operators
val myNums = (1 to 500).toList
list.map(_ + 1)
- Change list.map to list.par.map.
- Change toList to toListPar
- Change val to val.par
- Change toList to toParallelList
- a variable defined outside a function
- a variable referenced in a function that is not assigned a value by that function
- a variable that has a global scope
- a variable defined in a class and available to all methods in that class
- AltThread
- AltFuture
- AltProcess
- Future
x= List(1,2,4); x(1)?
- (1,2,4)
- 1
- Nil
- 2
- Nil
- Option
- Singleton
- Collection
In Scala, the Option data type is used instead of null for optional values. It is a container that can either hold a value or be empty, and it is used to represent the presence or absence of a value. This makes it safer to work with than using null, as it eliminates the risk of null pointer exceptions.
s"Foo $a?"
- "Foo " + a + "?"
Q53. Which expression is one way to iterate over a collection and generate a collection of each iteration's result?
- for-yield
- for-collect
- for-collect until
- collectuntil
- for-yield is one way to iterate over a collection and generate a collection of each iteration's result. The for loop with the yield keyword is used to iterate over a collection and generate a new collection with the results of each iteration.
- foo[2]
- foo(3)
- foo[3]
- foo(2)
- In many programming languages, arrays are indexed starting at 0, so the first element of the array is at index 0, the second element is at index 1, and so on. Therefore, to access the third element of an array named "foo", you would use the index 2 (since the array is indexed starting at 0). This can be done using the syntax foo[2] or foo(2) depending on the programming language. In some languages like Java, you can use foo[2] or foo[3] to access the third element.
Q55. What data type would you use to store an immutable collection of objects when you don't know how many members will be in the collection?
- Tuple
- List
- Object
- Array
- You would use a List data type to store an immutable collection of objects when you don't know how many members will be in the collection. Lists are indexed collections of elements that can be accessed by their position in the list, and they are commonly used to store collections of items that need to be processed in order. Additionally, Lists are immutable, which means that their elements cannot be modified once they have been created, making them ideal for use cases where data integrity is important.
- AnyRef
- AnyColl
- AnyVal
- AnyClass
- All classes in Scala inherit from the AnyRef class by default. AnyRef is the base class for all reference types in Scala, and it is equivalent to the java.lang.Object class in Java. AnyVal is the base class for all value types in Scala, and Any is the base class for all types in Scala.
- A class of boolean operators
- A class of predefined error messages
- A constraint on values passed to a method or constructor
- A constraint on where a method may be called from
- A precondition in Scala is a constraint on the input values passed to a method or constructor, specifying the conditions that must be met for the method or constructor to execute correctly. It is used to check the validity of input values before the method or constructor is executed, and can be used to ensure that the method or constructor is called with the correct arguments.
- for(i <- 0 to 4) println(i)
- for(i <- 0 to 3) println(i+1)
- for(i <- 1 to 8 if i < 5) println(i)
- for(i <- 1 to 4) println(i)
- The correct answer is for(i <- 0 to 3) println(i+1) because it will start the iteration from 0 and end at 3, incrementing the value by 1 each time and printing it.
- &
- ||
- &&
- %
- The & or intersect method can be used to take the intersection of two sets in Scala.
- Nil
- Option
- Singleton
- Collection
- In Scala, the Option data type is used instead of null for optional values. It is a container that can either hold a value or be empty, and it is used to represent the presence or absence of a value. This makes it safer to work with than using null, as it eliminates the risk of null pointer exceptions.
- A trait can have concrete implementations, while an interface cannot.
- An interface can have concrete implementations, while a trait cannot.
- Traits can be mixed together, while interfaces cannot.
- Interfaces can be mixed together, while traits cannot.