Scala Best Practices
A collection of best practices, friendly to people that want to contribute.
- Version:
1.2
- Updated at:
2016-06-08
Table of Contents
-
- 2.1. MUST NOT use "return"
- 2.2. SHOULD use immutable data structures
- 2.3. SHOULD NOT update a "var" using loops or conditions
- 2.4. SHOULD NOT define useless traits
- 2.5. MUST NOT use "var" inside a case class
- 2.6. SHOULD NOT declare abstract "var" members
- 2.7. MUST NOT throw exceptions for validations of user input or flow control
- 2.8. MUST NOT catch Throwable
- 2.9. MUST NOT use "null"
- 2.10. MUST NOT use "Option.get"
- 2.11. MUST NOT use Java's Date or Calendar, instead use Joda-Time or JSR-310
- 2.12. SHOULD NOT use Any or AnyRef or isInstanceOf / asInstanceOf
- 2.13. MUST serialize dates as either Unix Timestamp or ISO 8601
- 2.14. MUST NOT use magic values
- 2.15. SHOULD NOT use "var" as shared state
- 2.16. Public functions SHOULD have an explicit return type
- 2.17. SHOULD NOT define case classes nested in other classes
- 2.18. MUST NOT include classes, traits and objects inside package objects
-
4. Concurrency and Parallelism
- 4.1. SHOULD avoid concurrency like the plague it is
- 4.2. SHOULD use appropriate abstractions only where suitable
- 4.3. SHOULD NOT wrap purely CPU-bound operations in Futures
- 4.4. MUST use Scala's BlockContext on blocking I/O
- 4.5. SHOULD NOT block
- 4.6. SHOULD use a separate thread-pool for blocking I/O
- 4.7. All public APIs SHOULD BE thread-safe
- 4.8. SHOULD avoid contention on shared reads
- 4.9. MUST provide a clearly defined and documented protocol for each component or actor that communicates over async boundaries
- 4.10. SHOULD always prefer single producer scenarios
- 4.11. MUST NOT hard-code the thread-pool / execution context
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