New Control Syntax
Scala 3 has a new "quiet" syntax for control expressions that does not rely on enclosing the condition in parentheses, and also allows to drop parentheses or braces around the generators of a for-expression. Examples:
if x < 0 then
"negative"
else if x == 0 then
"zero"
else
"positive"
if x < 0 then -x else x
while x >= 0 do x = f(x)
for x <- xs if x > 0
yield x * x
for
x <- xs
y <- ys
do
println(x + y)
try body
catch case ex: IOException => handle
The rules in detail are:
- The condition of an
if-expression can be written without enclosing parentheses if it is followed by athen. - The condition of a
while-loop can be written without enclosing parentheses if it is followed by ado. - The enumerators of a
for-expression can be written without enclosing parentheses or braces if they are followed by ayieldordo. - A
doin afor-expression expresses afor-loop. - A
catchcan be followed by a single case on the same line. If there are multiple cases, these have to appear within braces (just like in Scala 2) or an indented block.
Rewrites
The Scala 3 compiler can rewrite source code from old syntax to new syntax and back. When invoked with options -rewrite -new-syntax it will rewrite from old to new syntax, dropping parentheses and braces in conditions and enumerators. When invoked with options -rewrite -old-syntax it will rewrite in the reverse direction, inserting parentheses and braces as needed.
In this article