Mathematicians have their own little funny ways, so instead of saying "then we call function f
passing it x
as a parameter" as we programmers would say, they talk about "applying function f
to its argument x
".
In mathematics and computer science, Apply is a function that applies
functions to arguments.
Wikipedia
apply
serves the purpose of closing the gap between Object-Oriented and Functional paradigms in Scala. Every function in Scala can be represented as an object. Every function also has an OO type: for instance, a function that takes an Int
parameter and returns an Int
will have OO type of Function1[Int,Int]
.
// define a function in scala
(x:Int) => x + 1
// assign an object representing the function to a variable
val f = (x:Int) => x + 1
Since everything is an object in Scala f
can now be treated as a reference to Function1[Int,Int]
object. For example, we can call toString
method inherited from Any
, that would have been impossible for a pure function, because functions don't have methods:
f.toString
Or we could define another Function1[Int,Int]
object by calling compose
method on f
and chaining two different functions together:
val f2 = f.compose((x:Int) => x - 1)
Now if we want to actually execute the function, or as mathematician say "apply a function to its arguments" we would call the apply
method on the Function1[Int,Int]
object:
f2.apply(2)
Writing f.apply(args)
every time you want to execute a function represented as an object is the Object-Oriented way, but would add a lot of clutter to the code without adding much additional information and it would be nice to be able to use more standard notation, such as f(args)
. That's where Scala compiler steps in and whenever we have a reference f
to a function object and write f (args)
to apply arguments to the represented function the compiler silently expands f (args)
to the object method call f.apply (args)
.
Every function in Scala can be treated as an object and it works the other way too - every object can be treated as a function, provided it has the apply
method. Such objects can be used in the function notation:
// we will be able to use this object as a function, as well as an object
object Foo {
var y = 5
def apply (x: Int) = x + y
}
Foo (1) // using Foo object in function notation
There are many usage cases when we would want to treat an object as a function. The most common scenario is a factory pattern. Instead of adding clutter to the code using a factory method we can apply
object to a set of arguments to create a new instance of an associated class:
List(1,2,3) // same as List.apply(1,2,3) but less clutter, functional notation
// the way the factory method invocation would have looked
// in other languages with OO notation - needless clutter
List.instanceOf(1,2,3)
So apply
method is just a handy way of closing the gap between functions and objects in Scala.