I am a Scala noob. I have decided to write a spider solitaire solver as a first exercise to learn the language and functional programming in general.
I would like to generate a randomly shuffled deck of cards containing 1, 2, or 4 suits. Here is what I came up with:
val numberOfSuits = 1
(List("clubs", "diamonds", "hearts", "spades").take(numberOfSuits) * 4).take(4)
which should return
List("clubs", "clubs", "clubs", "clubs")
List("clubs", "diamonds", "clubs", "diamonds")
List("clubs", "diamonds", "hearts", "spades")
depending on the value of numberOfSuits, except there is no List "multiply" operation that I can find. Did I miss it? Is there a better way to generate the complete deck before shuffling?
BTW, I plan on using an Enumeration for the suits, but it was easier to type my question with strings. I will take the List generated above and using a for comprehension, iterate over the suits and a similar List of card "ranks" to generate a complete deck.
Flatten a finite lists of lists:
scala> List.fill(2)(List(1, 2, 3, 4)).flatten
res18: List[Int] = List(1, 2, 3, 4, 1, 2, 3, 4)
Flatten an infinite Stream of lists, take the first N elements:
scala> Stream.continually(List(1, 2, 3, 4)).flatten.take(8).toList
res19: List[Int] = List(1, 2, 3, 4, 1, 2, 3, 4)
You should look up the scaladoc for the object List. It has all manners of interesting methods for creation of lists. For instance, the following does exactly what you were trying to:
List.flatten(List.make(4, List("clubs", "diamonds", "hearts", "spades").take(numberOfSuits))).take(4)
A much nicer code, however, would be this (Scala 2.7):
val suits = List("clubs", "diamonds", "hearts", "spades")
List.tabulate(4, i => suits.apply(i % numberOfSuits))
On Scala 2.8 tabulate is curried, so the correct syntax would be:
List.tabulate(4)(i => suits.apply(i % numberOfSuits))
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