Using
A utility for performing automatic resource management. It can be used to perform an operation using resources, after which it releases the resources in reverse order of their creation.
Usage
There are multiple ways to automatically manage resources with Using
. If you only need to manage a single resource, the apply
method is easiest; it wraps the resource opening, operation, and resource releasing in a Try
.
Example:
import java.io.{BufferedReader, FileReader}
import scala.util.{Try, Using}
val lines: Try[Seq[String]] =
Using(new BufferedReader(new FileReader("file.txt"))) { reader =>
Iterator.continually(reader.readLine()).takeWhile(_ != null).toSeq
}
If you need to manage multiple resources, Using.Manager
should be used. It allows the managing of arbitrarily many resources, whose creation, use, and release are all wrapped in a Try
.
Example:
import java.io.{BufferedReader, FileReader}
import scala.util.{Try, Using}
val lines: Try[Seq[String]] = Using.Manager { use =>
val r1 = use(new BufferedReader(new FileReader("file1.txt")))
val r2 = use(new BufferedReader(new FileReader("file2.txt")))
val r3 = use(new BufferedReader(new FileReader("file3.txt")))
val r4 = use(new BufferedReader(new FileReader("file4.txt")))
// use your resources here
def lines(reader: BufferedReader): Iterator[String] =
Iterator.continually(reader.readLine()).takeWhile(_ != null)
(lines(r1) ++ lines(r2) ++ lines(r3) ++ lines(r4)).toList
}
If you wish to avoid wrapping management and operations in a Try
, you can use Using.resource
, which throws any exceptions that occur.
Example:
import java.io.{BufferedReader, FileReader}
import scala.util.Using
val lines: Seq[String] =
Using.resource(new BufferedReader(new FileReader("file.txt"))) { reader =>
Iterator.continually(reader.readLine()).takeWhile(_ != null).toSeq
}
Suppression Behavior
If two exceptions are thrown (e.g., by an operation and closing a resource), one of them is re-thrown, and the other is added to it as a suppressed exception. If the two exceptions are of different 'severities' (see below), the one of a higher severity is re-thrown, and the one of a lower severity is added to it as a suppressed exception. If the two exceptions are of the same severity, the one thrown first is re-thrown, and the one thrown second is added to it as a suppressed exception. If an exception is a ControlThrowable
, or if it does not support suppression (see Throwable
's constructor with an enableSuppression
parameter), an exception that would have been suppressed is instead discarded.
Exceptions are ranked from highest to lowest severity as follows:
-
java.lang.VirtualMachineError
-
java.lang.LinkageError
-
java.lang.InterruptedException
andjava.lang.ThreadDeath
-
fatal exceptions, excluding
scala.util.control.ControlThrowable
-
scala.util.control.ControlThrowable
-
all other exceptions
When more than two exceptions are thrown, the first two are combined and re-thrown as described above, and each successive exception thrown is combined as it is thrown.
Attributes
- Source
- Using.scala
- Graph
-
- Supertypes
- Self type
-
Using.type