Breaks

class Breaks

Provides the break control abstraction.

The break method uses a ControlThrowable to transfer control up the stack to an enclosing breakable.

It is typically used to abruptly terminate a for loop, but can be used to return from an arbitrary computation.

Control resumes after the breakable.

If there is no matching breakable, the BreakControl thrown by break is handled in the usual way: if not caught, it may terminate the current Thread.

BreakControl carries no stack trace, so the default exception handler does not print useful diagnostic information; there is no compile-time warning if there is no matching breakable.

A catch clause using NonFatal is safe to use with break; it will not short-circuit the transfer of control to the enclosing breakable.

A breakable matches a call to break if the methods were invoked on the same receiver object, which may be the convenience value Breaks.

Example usage:

val mybreaks = new Breaks
import mybreaks.{break, breakable}

breakable {
  for (x <- xs) {
    if (done) break()
    f(x)
  }
}

Calls to break from one instance of Breaks will never resume at the breakable of some other instance.

Any intervening exception handlers should use NonFatal, or use Try for evaluation:

val mybreaks = new Breaks
import mybreaks.{break, breakable}

breakable {
  for (x <- xs) Try { if (quit) break else f(x) }.foreach(println)
}
Companion
object
Source
Breaks.scala
class Object
trait Matchable
class Any
object Breaks

Type members

Classlikes

sealed trait TryBlock[T]

Value members

Concrete methods

def break(): Nothing

Break from the dynamically closest enclosing breakable block that also uses this Breaks instance.

Break from the dynamically closest enclosing breakable block that also uses this Breaks instance.

Note

This might be different from the statically closest enclosing block!

Invocation without parentheses relies on the conversion to "empty application".

Source
Breaks.scala
def breakable(op: => Unit): Unit

A block from which one can exit with a break.

A block from which one can exit with a break. The break may be executed further down in the call stack provided that it is called on the exact same instance of Breaks.

Source
Breaks.scala
def tryBreakable[T](op: => T): TryBlock[T]

Try a computation that produces a value, supplying a default to be used if the computation terminates with a break.

Try a computation that produces a value, supplying a default to be used if the computation terminates with a break.

tryBreakable {
 (1 to 3).map(i => if (math.random < .5) break else i * 2)
} catchBreak {
 Vector.empty
}
Source
Breaks.scala