The Scala API for Quantities, Units of Measure and Dimensional Analysis
Squants is a framework of data types and a domain specific language (DSL) for representing Quantities, their Units of Measure, and their Dimensional relationships. The API supports typesafe dimensional analysis, improved domain models and more. All types are immutable and thread-safe.
Current Release: 1.6.0 (API Docs)
Development Build: 1.7.0-SNAPSHOT (API Docs)
Build services provided by Travis CI
NOTE - This README reflects the feature set in the branch it can be found. For more information on feature availability of a specific version see the Release History or the README for a that version
Repository hosting for Squants is provided by Sonatype. To use Squants in your SBT project add the following dependency to your build.
"org.typelevel" %% "squants" % "1.6.0"
or
"org.typelevel" %% "squants" % "1.7.0-SNAPSHOT"
To use Squants in your Maven project add the following dependency
<dependency>
<groupId>org.typelevel</groupId>
<artifactId>squants_2.11</artifactId>
<version>1.6.0</version>
</dependency>
Beginning with Squants 0.4.x series, both Scala 2.10 and 2.11 builds are available. Beginning with Squants 1.x series, Scala 2.11, 2.12 and 2.13 builds are available. Scala.js is supported on version 0.6.31 and 1.0.0-RC1
To use Squants interactively in the Scala REPL, clone the git repo and run sbt squantsJVM/console
git clone https://github.com/typelevel/squants
cd squants
sbt squantsJVM/console
This is an incomplete list of third-party libraries that support squants:
If your library isn't listed here, please open a PR to add it!
The Trouble with Doubles
When building programs that perform dimensional analysis, developers are quick to declare quantities using a basic numeric type, usually Double. While this may be satisfactory in some situations, it can often lead to semantic and other logic issues.
For example, when using a Double to describe quantities of Energy (kWh) and Power (kW), it is possible to compile a program that adds these two values together. This is not appropriate as kW and kWh measure quantities of two different dimensions. The unit kWh is used to measure an amount of Energy used or produced. The unit kW is used to measure Power/Load, the rate at which Energy is being used or produced, that is, Power is the first time derivative of Energy.
Power = Energy / Time
Consider the following code:
scala> val loadKw = 1.2
loadKw: Double = 1.2
scala> val energyMwh = 24.2
energyMwh: Double = 24.2
scala> val sumKw = loadKw + energyMwh
sumKw: Double = 25.4
This example not only adds quantities of different dimensions (Power vs Energy), it also fails to convert the scales implied in the val names (Mega vs Kilo). Because this code compiles, detection of these errors is pushed further into the development cycle.
Only quantities with the same dimensions may be compared, equated, added, or subtracted.
Squants helps prevent errors like these by type checking operations at compile time and automatically applying scale and type conversions at run-time. For example:
scala> import squants.energy.{Kilowatts, Megawatts, Power}
import squants.energy.{Kilowatts, Megawatts, Power}
scala> val load1: Power = Kilowatts(12)
load1: squants.energy.Power = 12.0 kW
scala> val load2: Power = Megawatts(0.023)
load2: squants.energy.Power = 0.023 MW
scala> val sum = load1 + load2
sum: squants.energy.Power = 35.0 kW
scala> sum == Kilowatts(35)
res0: Boolean = true
scala> sum == Megawatts(0.035) // comparisons automatically convert scale
res1: Boolean = true
The above sample works because Kilowatts and Megawatts are both units of Power. Only the scale is different and the library applies an appropriate conversion. Also, notice that keeping track of the scale within the value name is no longer needed:
scala> import squants.energy.{Energy, Power, Kilowatts, KilowattHours}
import squants.energy.{Energy, Power, Kilowatts, KilowattHours}
scala> val load: Power = Kilowatts(1.2)
load: squants.energy.Power = 1.2 kW
scala> val energy: Energy = KilowattHours(23.0)
energy: squants.energy.Energy = 23.0 kWh
Invalid operations, like adding power and energy, no longer compile:
scala> val sum = load + energy
<console>:16: error: type mismatch;
found : squants.energy.Energy
required: squants.energy.Power
val sum = load + energy
^
By using stronger types, we catch the error earlier in the development cycle, preventing the error made when using Double in the example above.
One may take quantities with different dimensions, and multiply or divide them.
Dimensionally correct type conversions are a key feature of Squants.
Conversions are implemented by defining relationships between Quantity types using the *
and /
operators.
Code samples in this section assume these imports:
import squants.energy.{Kilowatts, Power}
import squants.time.{Hours, Days}
The following code demonstrates creating ratio between two quantities of the same dimension, resulting in a dimensionless value:
scala> val ratio = Days(1) / Hours(3)
ratio: Double = 8.0
This code demonstrates use of the Power.*
method that takes a Time
and returns an Energy
:
scala> val load = Kilowatts(1.2)
load: squants.energy.Power = 1.2 kW
scala> val time = Hours(2)
time: squants.time.Time = 2.0 h
scala> val energyUsed = load * time
energyUsed: squants.energy.Energy = 2400.0 Wh
This code demonstrates use of the Energy./
method that takes a Time
and returns a Power
:
scala> val aveLoad: Power = energyUsed / time
aveLoad: squants.energy.Power = 1200.0 W
Code samples in this section assume these imports:
import scala.language.postfixOps
import squants.energy.{Gigawatts, Kilowatts, Power, Megawatts}
import squants.mass.MassConversions._
import squants.mass.{Kilograms, Pounds}
import squants.thermal.TemperatureConversions._
import squants.thermal.Fahrenheit
Quantity values are based in the units used to create them.
scala> val loadA: Power = Kilowatts(1200)
loadA: squants.energy.Power = 1200.0 kW
scala> val loadB: Power = Megawatts(1200)
loadB: squants.energy.Power = 1200.0 MW
Since Squants properly equates values of a like dimension, regardless of the unit, there is usually no reason to explicitly convert from one to the other. This is especially true if the user code is primarily performing dimensional analysis.
However, there are times when you may need to set a Quantity value to a specific unit (eg, for proper JSON encoding).
When necessary, a quantity can be converted to another unit using the in
method.
scala> val loadA = Kilowatts(1200)
loadA: squants.energy.Power = 1200.0 kW
scala> val loadB = loadA in Megawatts
loadB: squants.energy.Power = 1.2 MW
scala> val loadC = loadA in Gigawatts
loadC: squants.energy.Power = 0.0012 GW
Sometimes you need to get the numeric value of the quantity in a specific unit (eg, for submission to an external service that requires a numeric in a specified unit or to perform analysis beyond Squant's domain)
When necessary, the value can be extracted in the desired unit with the to
method.
scala> val load: Power = Kilowatts(1200)
load: squants.energy.Power = 1200.0 kW
scala> val kw: Double = load to Kilowatts
kw: Double = 1200.0
scala> val mw: Double = load to Megawatts
mw: Double = 1.2
scala> val gw: Double = load to Gigawatts
gw: Double = 0.0012
Most types include methods with convenient aliases for the to
methods.
scala> val kw: Double = load toKilowatts
kw: Double = 1200.0
scala> val mw: Double = load toMegawatts
mw: Double = 1.2
scala> val gw: Double = load toGigawatts
gw: Double = 0.0012
NOTE - It is important to use the to
method for extracting the numeric value,
as this ensures you will be getting the numeric value for the desired unit.
Quantity.value
should not be accessed directly.
To prevent improper usage, direct access to the Quantity.value
field may be deprecated in a future version.
Creating strings formatted in the desired unit:
scala> val kw: String = load toString Kilowatts
kw: String = 1200.0 kW
scala> val mw: String = load toString Megawatts
mw: String = 1.2 MW
scala> val gw: String = load toString Gigawatts
gw: String = 0.0012 GW
Creating Tuple2[Double, String]
that includes a numeric value and unit symbol:
scala> val load: Power = Kilowatts(1200)
load: squants.energy.Power = 1200.0 kW
scala> val kw = load toTuple
kw: (Double, String) = (1200.0,kW)
scala> val mw = load toTuple Megawatts
mw: (Double, String) = (1.2,MW)
scala> val gw = load toTuple Gigawatts
gw: (Double, String) = (0.0012,GW)
This can be useful for passing properly scaled quantities to other processes that do not use Squants, or require use of more basic types (Double, String)
Simple console based conversions (using DSL described below)
scala> 1.kilograms to Pounds
res0: Double = 2.2046226218487757
scala> kilogram / pound
res1: Double = 2.2046226218487757
scala> 2.1.pounds to Kilograms
res2: Double = 0.952543977
scala> 2.1.pounds / kilogram
res3: Double = 0.9525439770000002
scala> 100.C to Fahrenheit
res4: Double = 212.0
Apply a Double => Double
operation to the underlying value of a quantity, while preserving its type and unit.
scala> import squants.energy.Kilowatts
import squants.energy.Kilowatts
scala> val load = Kilowatts(2.0)
load: squants.energy.Power = 2.0 kW
scala> val newLoad = load.map(v => v * 2 + 10)
newLoad: squants.energy.Power = 14.0 kW
The q.map(f)
method effectively expands to q.unit(f(q.to(q.unit))
NOTE - For Money objects, use the mapAmount
method as this will retain the BigDecimal precision used there.
Create an implicit Quantity value to be used as a tolerance in approximations.
Then use the approx
method (or =~
, ~=
, ≈
operators) like you would use the equals
method (==
operator).
scala> import squants.energy.{Kilowatts, Watts}
import squants.energy.{Kilowatts, Watts}
scala> val load = Kilowatts(2.0)
load: squants.energy.Power = 2.0 kW
scala> val reading = Kilowatts(1.9999)
reading: squants.energy.Power = 1.9999 kW
Calls to approx
(and its symbolic aliases) use an implicit tolerance:
scala> implicit val tolerance = Watts(.1)
tolerance: squants.energy.Power = 0.1 W
scala> load =~ reading
res0: Boolean = true
scala> load ≈ reading
res1: Boolean = true
scala> load approx reading
res2: Boolean = true
The =~
and ≈
are the preferred operators as they have the correct precedence for equality operations.
The ~=
is provided for those who wish to use a more natural looking approx operator using standard characters.
However, because of its lower precedence, user code may require parenthesis around these comparisons.
All Quantity
types in Squants represent the scalar value of a quantity.
That is, there is no direction information encoded in any of the Quantity types.
This is true even for Quantities which are normally vector quantities (ie. Velocity, Acceleration, etc).
Vector quantities in Squants are implemented as case classes that takes a variable parameter list of like quantities representing a set of point coordinates in Cartesian space. The SVector object is a factory for creating DoubleVectors and QuantityVectors. The dimensionality of the vector is determined by the number of arguments. Most basic vector operations are currently supported (addition, subtraction, scaling, cross and dot products)
scala> import squants.{QuantityVector, SVector}
import squants.{QuantityVector, SVector}
scala> import squants.space.{Kilometers, Length}
import squants.space.{Kilometers, Length}
scala> import squants.space.LengthConversions._
import squants.space.LengthConversions._
scala> val vector: QuantityVector[Length] = SVector(Kilometers(1.2), Kilometers(4.3), Kilometers(2.3))
vector: squants.QuantityVector[squants.space.Length] = QuantityVector(WrappedArray(1.2 km, 4.3 km, 2.3 km))
scala> val magnitude: Length = vector.magnitude // returns the scalar value of the vector
magnitude: squants.space.Length = 5.021951811795888 km
scala> val normalized = vector.normalize(Kilometers) // returns a corresponding vector scaled to 1 of the given unit
normalized: vector.SVectorType = QuantityVector(ArrayBuffer(0.2389509188800581 km, 0.8562407926535415 km, 0.45798926118677796 km))
scala> val vector2: QuantityVector[Length] = SVector(Kilometers(1.2), Kilometers(4.3), Kilometers(2.3))
vector2: squants.QuantityVector[squants.space.Length] = QuantityVector(WrappedArray(1.2 km, 4.3 km, 2.3 km))
scala> val vectorSum = vector + vector2 // returns the sum of two vectors
vectorSum: vector.SVectorType = QuantityVector(ArrayBuffer(2.4 km, 8.6 km, 4.6 km))
scala> val vectorDiff = vector - vector2 // return the difference of two vectors
vectorDiff: vector.SVectorType = QuantityVector(ArrayBuffer(0.0 km, 0.0 km, 0.0 km))
scala> val vectorScaled = vector * 5 // returns vector scaled 5 times
vectorScaled: vector.SVectorType = QuantityVector(ArrayBuffer(6.0 km, 21.5 km, 11.5 km))
scala> val vectorReduced = vector / 5 // returns vector reduced 5 time
vectorReduced: vector.SVectorType = QuantityVector(ArrayBuffer(0.24 km, 0.86 km, 0.45999999999999996 km))
scala> val vectorDouble = vector / 5.meters // returns vector reduced and converted to DoubleVector
vectorDouble: squants.DoubleVector = DoubleVector(ArrayBuffer(240.0, 860.0, 459.99999999999994))
scala> val dotProduct = vector * vectorDouble // returns the Dot Product of vector and vectorDouble
dotProduct: squants.space.Length = 5044.0 km
scala> val crossProduct = vector crossProduct vectorDouble // currently only supported for 3-dimensional vectors
crossProduct: vector.SVectorType = QuantityVector(WrappedArray(0.0 km, 1.1368683772161603E-13 km, 0.0 km))
Simple non-quantity (Double based) vectors are also supported.
import squants.DoubleVector
val vector: DoubleVector = SVector(1.2, 4.3, 2.3, 5.4) // a Four-dimensional vector
Currently dimensional conversions are supported by using the slightly verbose, but flexible map method.
scala> import squants.{DoubleVector, QuantityVector}
import squants.{DoubleVector, QuantityVector}
scala> import squants.motion.Velocity
import squants.motion.Velocity
scala> import squants.space.{Area, Kilometers, Length, Meters}
import squants.space.{Area, Kilometers, Length, Meters}
scala> import squants.time.Seconds
import squants.time.Seconds
scala> val vectorLength = QuantityVector(Kilometers(1.2), Kilometers(4.3), Kilometers(2.3))
vectorLength: squants.QuantityVector[squants.space.Length] = QuantityVector(WrappedArray(1.2 km, 4.3 km, 2.3 km))
scala> val vectorArea = vectorLength.map[Area](_ * Kilometers(2)) // QuantityVector(2.4 km², 8.6 km², 4.6 km²)
vectorArea: squants.QuantityVector[squants.space.Area] = QuantityVector(ArrayBuffer(2.4 km², 8.6 km², 4.6 km²))
scala> val vectorVelocity = vectorLength.map[Velocity](_ / Seconds(1)) // QuantityVector(1200.0 m/s, 4300.0 m/s, 2300.0 m/s)
vectorVelocity: squants.QuantityVector[squants.motion.Velocity] = QuantityVector(ArrayBuffer(1200.0 m/s, 4300.0 m/s, 2300.0 m/s))
scala> val vectorDouble = DoubleVector(1.2, 4.3, 2.3)
vectorDouble: squants.DoubleVector = DoubleVector(WrappedArray(1.2, 4.3, 2.3))
scala> val vectorLength = vectorDouble.map[Length](Kilometers(_)) // QuantityVector(1.2 km, 4.3 km, 2.3 km)
vectorLength: squants.QuantityVector[squants.space.Length] = QuantityVector(ArrayBuffer(1.2 km, 4.3 km, 2.3 km))
Convert QuantityVectors to specific units using the to
or in
method - much like Quantities.
scala> val vectorLength = QuantityVector(Kilometers(1.2), Kilometers(4.3), Kilometers(2.3))
vectorLength: squants.QuantityVector[squants.space.Length] = QuantityVector(WrappedArray(1.2 km, 4.3 km, 2.3 km))
scala> val vectorMetersNum = vectorLength.to(Meters) // DoubleVector(1200.0, 4300.0, 2300.0)
vectorMetersNum: squants.DoubleVector = DoubleVector(ArrayBuffer(1200.0, 4300.0, 2300.0))
scala> val vectorMeters = vectorLength.in(Meters) // QuantityVector(1200.0 m, 4300.0 m, 2300.0 m)
vectorMeters: squants.QuantityVector[squants.space.Length] = QuantityVector(ArrayBuffer(1200.0 m, 4300.0 m, 2300.0 m))
Market Types are similar but not quite the same as other quantities in the library. The primary type, Money, is a Dimensional Quantity, and its Units of Measure are Currencies. However, because the conversion multipliers between currency units can not be predefined, many of the behaviors have been overridden and augmented to realize correct behavior.
A Quantity of purchasing power measured in Currency units. Like other quantities, the Unit of Measures are used to create Money values.
scala> import squants.market.{BTC, JPY, USD, XAU}
import squants.market.{BTC, JPY, USD, XAU}
scala> val tenBucks = USD(10) // Money: 10 USD
tenBucks: squants.market.Money = 1E+1 USD
scala> val someYen = JPY(1200) // Money: 1200 JPY
someYen: squants.market.Money = 1.2E+3 JPY
scala> val goldStash = XAU(50) // Money: 50 XAU
goldStash: squants.market.Money = 5E+1 XAU
scala> val digitalCache = BTC(50) // Money: 50 BTC
digitalCache: squants.market.Money = 5E+1 BTC
A Ratio between Money and another Quantity. A Price value is typed on a Quantity and can be denominated in any defined Currency.
Price = Money / Quantity
Assuming these imports:
import squants.{Dozen, Each}
import squants.energy.MegawattHours
import squants.market.USD
import squants.space.UsGallons
You can compute the following:
scala> val threeForADollar = USD(1) / Each(3)
threeForADollar: squants.market.Price[squants.Dimensionless] = 1 USD/3.0 ea
scala> val energyPrice = USD(102.20) / MegawattHours(1)
energyPrice: squants.market.Price[squants.energy.Energy] = 102.2 USD/1.0 MWh
scala> val milkPrice = USD(4) / UsGallons(1)
milkPrice: squants.market.Price[squants.space.Volume] = 4 USD/1.0 gal
scala> val costForABunch = threeForADollar * Dozen(10)
costForABunch: squants.market.Money = 4E+1 USD
scala> val energyCost = energyPrice * MegawattHours(4)
energyCost: squants.market.Money = 408.8 USD
scala> val milkQuota = USD(20) / milkPrice
milkQuota: squants.space.Volume = 5.0 gal
Conversions to Strings
scala> val money = USD(123.456)
money: squants.market.Money = 123.456 USD
scala> val s = money.toString // returns full precision amount with currency code
s: String = 123.456 USD
scala> val s = money.toFormattedString // returns currency symbol and amount rounded based on currency rules
s: String = $123.46
Currency Exchange Rates are used to define the conversion factors between currencies
scala> import squants.market.{CurrencyExchangeRate, JPY, Money, USD}
import squants.market.{CurrencyExchangeRate, JPY, Money, USD}
scala> // create an exchange rate
| val rate1 = CurrencyExchangeRate(USD(1), JPY(100))
rate1: squants.market.CurrencyExchangeRate = USD/JPY 100.0
scala> // OR
| val rate2 = USD / JPY(100)
rate2: squants.market.CurrencyExchangeRate = USD/JPY 100.0
scala> // OR
| val rate3 = JPY(100) -> USD(1)
rate3: squants.market.CurrencyExchangeRate = USD/JPY 100.0
scala> // OR
| val rate4 = JPY(100) toThe USD(1)
rate4: squants.market.CurrencyExchangeRate = USD/JPY 100.0
scala> val someYen: Money = JPY(350)
someYen: squants.market.Money = 3.5E+2 JPY
scala> val someBucks: Money = USD(23.50)
someBucks: squants.market.Money = 23.5 USD
Use the convert
method which automatically converts the money to the 'other' currency:
scala> val dollarAmount: Money = rate1.convert(someYen)
dollarAmount: squants.market.Money = 3.5 USD
scala> val yenAmount: Money = rate1.convert(someBucks)
yenAmount: squants.market.Money = 2.35E+3 JPY
Or just use the *
operator in either direction (money * rate, or rate * money):
scala> val dollarAmount2: Money = rate1 * someYen
dollarAmount2: squants.market.Money = 3.5 USD
scala> val yenAmount2: Money = someBucks * rate1
yenAmount2: squants.market.Money = 2.35E+3 JPY
A MoneyContext can be implicitly declared to define default settings and applicable exchange rates within its scope. This allows your application to work with a default currency based on an application configuration or other dynamic source. It also provides support for updating exchange rates and using those rates for automatic conversions between currencies. The technique and frequency chosen for exchange rate updates is completely in control of the application.
Assuming these imports:
import squants.energy.MegawattHours
import squants.market.{CAD, JPY, MXN, USD}
import squants.market.defaultMoneyContext
You can compute:
scala> val exchangeRates = List(USD / CAD(1.05), USD / MXN(12.50), USD / JPY(100))
exchangeRates: List[squants.market.CurrencyExchangeRate] = List(USD/CAD 1.05, USD/MXN 12.5, USD/JPY 100.0)
scala> implicit val moneyContext = defaultMoneyContext withExchangeRates exchangeRates
moneyContext: squants.market.MoneyContext = MoneyContext(DefaultCurrency(USD),Currencies(ARS,AUD,BRL,BTC,CAD,CHF,CLP,CNY,CZK,DKK,ETH,EUR,GBP,HKD,INR,JPY,KRW,LTC,MXN,MYR,NAD,NOK,NZD,RUB,SEK,USD,XAG,XAU,ZAR),ExchangeRates(USD/CAD 1.05,USD/JPY 100.0,USD/MXN 12.5),AllowIndirectConversions(true))
scala> val energyPrice = USD(102.20) / MegawattHours(1)
energyPrice: squants.market.Price[squants.energy.Energy] = 102.2 USD/1.0 MWh
scala> val someMoney = Money(350) // 350 in the default Cur
someMoney: squants.market.Money = 3.5E+2 USD
scala> val usdMoney: Money = someMoney in USD
usdMoney: squants.market.Money = 3.5E+2 USD
scala> val usdBigDecimal: BigDecimal = someMoney to USD
usdBigDecimal: BigDecimal = 350.0
scala> val yenCost: Money = (energyPrice * MegawattHours(5)) in JPY
yenCost: squants.market.Money = 5.11E+4 JPY
scala> val northAmericanSales: Money = (CAD(275) + USD(350) + MXN(290)) in USD
northAmericanSales: squants.market.Money = 635.1047619047619047619047619047619 USD
A QuantityRange
is used to represent a range of Quantity values between an upper and lower bound:
import squants.QuantityRange
import squants.energy.{Kilowatts, Megawatts, Power}
val load1: Power = Kilowatts(1000)
// load1: squants.energy.Power = 1000.0 kW
val load2: Power = Kilowatts(5000)
// load2: squants.energy.Power = 5000.0 kW
val range: QuantityRange[Power] = QuantityRange(load1, load2)
// range: squants.QuantityRange[squants.energy.Power] = QuantityRange(1000.0 kW,5000.0 kW)
The QuantityRange
constructor requires that upper
is strictly greater than lower
:
import squants.space.LengthConversions._
// import squants.space.LengthConversions._
// this will work b/c upper > lower
QuantityRange(1.km, 5.km)
// res1: squants.QuantityRange[squants.space.Length] = QuantityRange(1.0 km,5.0 km)
This will fail because lower
= upper
:
scala> QuantityRange(1.km, 1.km)
java.lang.IllegalArgumentException: QuantityRange upper bound must be strictly greater than to the lower bound
at squants.QuantityRange.<init>(QuantityRange.scala:25)
... 43 elided
QuantityRange
contains two functions that check if an element is part of the range, contains
and includes
.
These differ in how they treat the range's upper bound: contains()
excludes it but includes()
includes it.
scala> val distances = QuantityRange(1.km, 5.km)
distances: squants.QuantityRange[squants.space.Length] = QuantityRange(1.0 km,5.0 km)
scala> distances.contains(5.km) // this is false b/c contains() doesn't include the upper range
res3: Boolean = false
scala> distances.includes(5.km) // this is true b/c includes() does include the upper range
res4: Boolean = true
The multiplication and division operators create a Seq
of ranges from the original.
For example:
Create a Seq of 10 sequential ranges starting with the original and each the same size as the original:
val rs1 = range * 10
// rs1: squants.QuantitySeries[squants.energy.Power] = Vector(QuantityRange(1000.0 kW,5000.0 kW), QuantityRange(5000.0 kW,9000.0 kW), QuantityRange(9000.0 kW,13000.0 kW), QuantityRange(13000.0 kW,17000.0 kW), QuantityRange(17000.0 kW,21000.0 kW), QuantityRange(21000.0 kW,25000.0 kW), QuantityRange(25000.0 kW,29000.0 kW), QuantityRange(29000.0 kW,33000.0 kW), QuantityRange(33000.0 kW,37000.0 kW), QuantityRange(37000.0 kW,41000.0 kW))
Create a Seq of 10 sequential ranges each 1/10th of the original size:
val rs2 = range / 10
// rs2: squants.QuantitySeries[squants.energy.Power] = Vector(QuantityRange(1000.0 kW,1400.0 kW), QuantityRange(1400.0 kW,1800.0 kW), QuantityRange(1800.0 kW,2200.0 kW), QuantityRange(2200.0 kW,2600.0 kW), QuantityRange(2600.0 kW,3000.0 kW), QuantityRange(3000.0 kW,3400.0 kW), QuantityRange(3400.0 kW,3800.0 kW), QuantityRange(3800.0 kW,4200.0 kW), QuantityRange(4200.0 kW,4600.0 kW), QuantityRange(4600.0 kW,5000.0 kW))
Create a Seq of 10 sequential ranges each with a size of 400 kilowatts:
val rs3 = range / Kilowatts(400)
// rs3: squants.QuantitySeries[squants.energy.Power] = Vector(QuantityRange(1000.0 kW,1400.0 kW), QuantityRange(1400.0 kW,1800.0 kW), QuantityRange(1800.0 kW,2200.0 kW), QuantityRange(2200.0 kW,2600.0 kW), QuantityRange(2600.0 kW,3000.0 kW), QuantityRange(3000.0 kW,3400.0 kW), QuantityRange(3400.0 kW,3800.0 kW), QuantityRange(3800.0 kW,4200.0 kW), QuantityRange(4200.0 kW,4600.0 kW), QuantityRange(4600.0 kW,5000.0 kW))
QuantityRange
supports foreach, map, and foldLeft/foldRight. These vary slightly from the versions
in the Scala standard library in that they take a divisior as the first parameter. The examples below
illustrate their use.
Subdivide range into 1-Megawatt "slices", and foreach over each of slices:
range.foreach(Megawatts(1)) { r => println(s"lower = ${r.lower}, upper = ${r.upper}") }
// lower = 1000.0 kW, upper = 2000.0 kW
// lower = 2000.0 kW, upper = 3000.0 kW
// lower = 3000.0 kW, upper = 4000.0 kW
// lower = 4000.0 kW, upper = 5000.0 kW
Subdivide range into 10 slices and map over each slice:
range.map(10) { r => r.upper }
// res6: Seq[squants.energy.Power] = Vector(1400.0 kW, 1800.0 kW, 2200.0 kW, 2600.0 kW, 3000.0 kW, 3400.0 kW, 3800.0 kW, 4200.0 kW, 4600.0 kW, 5000.0 kW)
Subdivide range into 10 slices and fold over them, using 0 Megawatts as a starting value:
range.foldLeft(10, Megawatts(0)) { (z, r) => z + r.upper }
// res7: squants.energy.Power = 32.0 MW
NOTE - Because these implementations of foreach, map and fold* take a parameter (the divisor), these methods are not directly compatible with Scala's for comprehensions. To use in a for comprehension, apply the * or / operators as described above to create a Seq from the Range.
for {
interval <- (0.seconds to 1.seconds) * 60 // 60 time ranges, 0s to 1s, 1s to 2s, ...., 59s to 60s
...
} yield ...
Implicit conversions give the DSL some features that allows user code to express quantities in a more naturally expressive and readable way.
Code samples in this section assume these imports
import squants.energy.{Kilowatts, MegawattHours, Power}
import squants.market.{Price, USD}
import squants.time.Hours
Create Quantities using Unit Of Measure Factory objects (no implicits required):
scala> val load = Kilowatts(100)
load: squants.energy.Power = 100.0 kW
scala> val time = Hours(3.75)
time: squants.time.Time = 3.75 h
scala> val money = USD(112.50)
money: squants.market.Money = 112.5 USD
scala> val price = Price(money, MegawattHours(1))
price: squants.market.Price[squants.energy.Energy] = 112.5 USD/1.0 MWh
Create Quantities using Unit of Measure names and/or symbols (uses implicits):
import scala.language.postfixOps
import squants.energy.EnergyConversions._
import squants.energy.PowerConversions._
import squants.information.InformationConversions._
import squants.market.MoneyConversions._
import squants.space.LengthConversions._
import squants.time.TimeConversions._
scala> val load1 = 100 kW // Simple expressions don’t need dots
load1: squants.energy.Power = 100.0 kW
scala> val load2 = 100 megawatts
load2: squants.energy.Power = 100.0 MW
scala> val time = 3.hours + 45.minutes // Compound expressions may need dots
time: squants.time.Time = 3.75 h
Create Quantities using operations between other Quantities:
scala> val energyUsed = 100.kilowatts * (3.hours + 45.minutes)
energyUsed: squants.energy.Energy = 375000.0 Wh
scala> val price = 112.50.USD / 1.megawattHours
price: squants.market.Price[squants.energy.Energy] = 112.5 USD/1.0 MWh
scala> val speed = 55.miles / 1.hours
speed: squants.motion.Velocity = 24.587249174399997 m/s
Create Quantities using formatted Strings:
scala> val load = Power("40 MW")
load: scala.util.Try[squants.energy.Power] = Success(40.0 MW)
Create Quantities using Tuples:
scala> val load = Power((40.5, "MW"))
load: scala.util.Try[squants.energy.Power] = Success(40.5 MW)
Use single unit values to simplify expressions:
scala> // Hours(1) == 1.hours == hour
| val ramp = 100.kilowatts / hour
ramp: squants.energy.PowerRamp = 100000.0 W/h
scala> val speed = 100.kilometers / hour
speed: squants.motion.Velocity = 27.77777777777778 m/s
scala> // MegawattHours(1) == 1.megawattHours == megawattHour == MWh
| val hi = 100.dollars / MWh
hi: squants.market.Price[squants.energy.Energy] = 1E+2 USD/1.0 MWh
scala> val low = 40.dollars / megawattHour
low: squants.market.Price[squants.energy.Energy] = 4E+1 USD/1.0 MWh
Implicit conversion support for using Doubles, Longs and BigDecimals on the left side of multiply and divide operations:
scala> val load = 10.22 * 4.MW
load: squants.energy.Power = 40.88 MW
scala> val driveArrayCapacity = 12 * 600.gb
driveArrayCapacity: squants.information.Information = 7200.0 GB
scala> val freq = 60 / second
freq: squants.time.Frequency = 60.0 Hz
scala> val freq2 = BigDecimal(36000000) / hour
freq2: squants.time.Frequency = 10000.0 Hz
Create Quantity Ranges using to
or plusOrMinus
(+-
) operators:
val range1 = 1000.kW to 5000.kW // 1000.kW to 5000.kW
val range2 = 5000.kW plusOrMinus 1000.kW // 4000.kW to 6000.kW
val range2 = 5000.kW +- 1000.kW // 4000.kW to 6000.kW
Most Quantities that support implicit conversions also include an implicit Numeric object that can be imported to your code where Numeric support is required. These follow the following pattern:
scala> import squants.mass.{Grams, Kilograms}
import squants.mass.{Grams, Kilograms}
scala> import squants.mass.MassConversions.MassNumeric
import squants.mass.MassConversions.MassNumeric
scala> val sum = List(Kilograms(100), Grams(34510)).sum
sum: squants.mass.Mass = 134510.0 g
NOTE - Because a quantity can not be multiplied by a like quantity and return a like quantity, the Numeric.times
operation of numeric is implemented to throw an UnsupportedOperationException for all types except Dimensionless
.
The MoneyNumeric implementation is a bit different than the implementations for other quantity types in a few important ways.
- MoneyNumeric is a class, not an object like the others.
- To create a MoneyNumeric value there must be an implicit MoneyContext in scope.
- The MoneyContext must contain applicable exchange rates if you will be applying cross-currency Numeric ops.
The following code provides a basic example for creating a MoneyNumeric:
import squants.market.defaultMoneyContext
import squants.market.MoneyConversions._
import squants.market.USD
implicit val moneyContext = defaultMoneyContext
scala> implicit val moneyNum = new MoneyNumeric()
moneyNum: squants.market.MoneyConversions.MoneyNumeric = MoneyNumeric(MoneyContext(DefaultCurrency(USD),Currencies(ARS,AUD,BRL,BTC,CAD,CHF,CLP,CNY,CZK,DKK,ETH,EUR,GBP,HKD,INR,JPY,KRW,LTC,MXN,MYR,NAD,NOK,NZD,RUB,SEK,USD,XAG,XAU,ZAR),ExchangeRates(),AllowIndirectConversions(true)))
scala> val sum = List(USD(100), USD(10)).sum
sum: squants.market.Money = 1.1E+2 USD
Squants provides an experimental API for grouping related UnitOfMeasure
values together.
This are called UnitGroup
s. Squants provides UnitGroup
implementations for the SI, the US Customary system, and various other systems. End-users can create their own ad-hoc UnitGroup
s for UnitOfMeasure
s in a related dimension.
The UnitGroup
trait defines two public fields: units
, a Set[UnitOfMeasure]
, and sortedUnits
, which contains units
sorted in ascending order.
Almost every Dimension
in Squants has SI Units (with the exception of Information
and Money
). To avoid boilerplate, Squants generates UnitGroup
s for SI using implicits.
There are two UnitGroup
s provided for SI: "strict" and "expanded." Strict only includes SI
UnitOfMeasure defined in the SI; "expanded" includes non-SI units that are commonly used in
SI, such as litre, hectare, hour, minute, etc). See the linked document for a detailed list.
To summon the strict SI UnitGroup
for Length
, you would use this code:
import squants.space.Length
// import squants.space.Length
import squants.experimental.unitgroups.ImplicitDimensions.space._
// import squants.experimental.unitgroups.ImplicitDimensions.space._
import squants.experimental.unitgroups.UnitGroup
// import squants.experimental.unitgroups.UnitGroup
import squants.experimental.unitgroups.si.strict.implicits._
// import squants.experimental.unitgroups.si.strict.implicits._
val siLengths: UnitGroup[Length] = implicitly[UnitGroup[Length]]
// siLengths: squants.experimental.unitgroups.UnitGroup[squants.space.Length] = squants.experimental.unitgroups.si.strict.package$implicits$$anon$1@f52ca1b
To print out units and their conversion factors to the primary SI unit, you could use this code:
import squants.{Quantity, UnitOfMeasure}
// import squants.{Quantity, UnitOfMeasure}
def mkConversionFactor[A <: Quantity[A]](uom: UnitOfMeasure[A]): Double = {
val one = uom(1)
one.to(one.dimension.siUnit)
}
// mkConversionFactor: [A <: squants.Quantity[A]](uom: squants.UnitOfMeasure[A])Double
def mkTuple[A <: Quantity[A]](uom: UnitOfMeasure[A]): (String, Double) = {
(uom.symbol, mkConversionFactor(uom))
}
// mkTuple: [A <: squants.Quantity[A]](uom: squants.UnitOfMeasure[A])(String, Double)
siLengths.sortedUnits.toList.map(mkTuple).foreach(println)
// (nm,1.0E-9)
// (µm,1.0E-6)
// (mm,0.001)
// (cm,0.01)
// (dm,0.1)
// (m,1.0)
// (dam,10.0)
// (hm,100.0)
// (km,1000.0)
Note that UnitGroup
's sortedUnits
field is a SortedSet
, so before mapping over it,
you will probably want to convert it to a List, otherwise the output may be resorted.
Other UnitGroup
definitions don't use implicits. For example, squants.experimental.unitgroups.uscustomary.space.UsCustomaryLiquidVolumes
or squants.experimental.unitgroups.misc.TroyMasses
can be imported and used directly.
To create an ad-hoc UnitGroup
just implement the trait. For example, to make a US cooking measure UnitGroup
:
import squants.{Quantity, Dimension}
// import squants.{Quantity, Dimension}
import squants.space._
// import squants.space._
import squants.experimental.unitgroups.UnitGroup
// import squants.experimental.unitgroups.UnitGroup
val usCookingUnitGroup = new UnitGroup[Volume] {
// units don't have to be specified in-order.
val units: Set[UnitOfMeasure[Volume]] = Set(UsPints, UsGallons, Teaspoons, Tablespoons, UsQuarts, FluidOunces)
}
// usCookingUnitGroup: squants.experimental.unitgroups.UnitGroup[squants.space.Volume]{val units: Set[squants.UnitOfMeasure[squants.space.Volume]]} = $anon$1@495c28e0
// squants automatically sorts units
usCookingUnitGroup.sortedUnits.foreach(println)
// squants.space.Teaspoons$@1f2aa9fd
// squants.space.Tablespoons$@20a4318e
// squants.space.FluidOunces$@3f31c22
// squants.space.UsPints$@6b5332c3
// squants.space.UsQuarts$@5293da73
// squants.space.UsGallons$@25de9dee
The UnitGroup
values provided with Squants are only samples and aren't intended to be exhaustive.
We encourage users to make their own UnitGroup
defintitions and submit them as PRs if they're generally
applicable.
Squants provides an experimental API for formatting Quantities in the "best unit." For example, convert Inches(12) to Feet(1). This is useful for producing human-friendly output.
To use a formatter, you must implement the squants.formatters.Formatter
trait:
trait Formatter[A <: Quantity[A]] {
def inBestUnit(quantity: Quantity[A]): A
}
There is a default formatter implementation in squants.experimental.formatter.DefaultFormatter
. This builds on the UnitGroup
API discussed above to choose the best UnitOfMeasure
for a Quantity
. The DefaultFormatter
algorithm will probably
work for most use-cases, but users can create their own Formatters
if they have custom needs.
To use DefaultFormatter
import it, and a unit group:
import squants.experimental.formatter.DefaultFormatter
import squants.experimental.unitgroups.misc.AstronomicalLengthUnitGroup
Then create the formatter by passing in a unit group:
val astroFormatter = new DefaultFormatter(AstronomicalLengthUnitGroup)
// astroFormatter: squants.experimental.formatter.DefaultFormatter[squants.space.Length] = squants.experimental.formatter.DefaultFormatter@790fe346
Now, we create some values using human-unfriendly numbers:
import squants.space.LengthConversions._
// import squants.space.LengthConversions._
val earthToJupiter = 588000000.km
// earthToJupiter: squants.space.Length = 588000000.0 km
val earthToVoyager1 = 2.06e10.km
// earthToVoyager1: squants.space.Length = 20600000000.0 km
val earthToAlphaCentauri = 4.1315e+13.km
// earthToAlphaCentauri: squants.space.Length = 41315000000000.0 km
And format them into appropriate units (AUs and Parsecs, in this case):
astroFormatter.inBestUnit(earthToJupiter)
// res3: squants.space.Length = 3.9305372278938457 au
astroFormatter.inBestUnit(earthToVoyager1)
// res4: squants.space.Length = 137.70249471872998 au
astroFormatter.inBestUnit(earthToAlphaCentauri)
// res5: squants.space.Length = 1.3389279634339382 pc
There is a nicer syntax for formatters available via implicits.
This lets you write expressions such as 12.inches.inBestUnit
. This syntax is added per-Dimension
.
To use this syntax, first import squants.experimental.formatter.syntax._
.
Then, for each Dimension
you wish to use, place a Formatter for the Dimension in implicit scope. In this example,
we're adding support for Length
.
import squants.experimental.formatter.DefaultFormatter
import squants.experimental.formatter.syntax._
import squants.mass.MassConversions._
import squants.space.Length
import squants.space.LengthConversions._
import squants.experimental.unitgroups.misc.AstronomicalLengthUnitGroup
implicit val astroFormatter = new DefaultFormatter(AstronomicalLengthUnitGroup)
// astroFormatter: squants.experimental.formatter.DefaultFormatter[squants.space.Length] = squants.experimental.formatter.DefaultFormatter@135301a1
val earthToJupiter = 588000000.km
// earthToJupiter: squants.space.Length = 588000000.0 km
val earthToVoyager1 = 2.06e10.km
// earthToVoyager1: squants.space.Length = 20600000000.0 km
val earthToAlphaCentauri = 4.1315e+13.km
// earthToAlphaCentauri: squants.space.Length = 41315000000000.0 km
earthToJupiter.inBestUnit
// res0: squants.Quantity[squants.space.Length] = 3.9305372278938457 au
earthToVoyager1.inBestUnit
// res1: squants.Quantity[squants.space.Length] = 137.70249471872998 au
earthToAlphaCentauri.inBestUnit
// res2: squants.Quantity[squants.space.Length] = 1.3389279634339382 pc
This example won't compile because there is no Formatter[Mass]
in implicit scope:
scala> 5000.grams.inBestUnit
<console>:26: error: could not find implicit value for parameter formatter: squants.experimental.formatter.Formatter[squants.mass.Mass]
5000.grams.inBestUnit
^
When using SI units, and the default formatter algorithm, you don't have to declare a Formatter
and place it in
implicit scope. The compiler can do that for you. This creates a very human-friendly API by using the appropriate
imports.
First, import the SI unit groups and their implicits:
import squants.experimental.unitgroups.ImplicitDimensions.space._
import squants.experimental.unitgroups.si.strict.implicits._
Next, import the formatter syntax described above:
import squants.experimental.formatter.syntax._
Finally, add imports for implicitly deriving formatters:
scala> import squants.experimental.formatter.implicits._
import squants.experimental.formatter.implicits._
Now we can create quantities and format them by calling .inBestUnit
directly:
import squants.space.LengthConversions._
5.cm.inBestUnit
// res0: squants.Quantity[squants.space.Length] = 5.0 cm
500.cm.inBestUnit
// res1: squants.Quantity[squants.space.Length] = 5.0 m
3000.meters.inBestUnit
// res2: squants.Quantity[squants.space.Length] = 3.0 km
The type hierarchy includes the following core types: Quantity, Dimension, and UnitOfMeasure
A Dimension represents a type of Quantity. For example: Mass, Length, Time, etc.
A Quantity represents a dimensional value or measurement. A Quantity is a combination of a numeric value and a unit. For example: 2 lb, 10 km, 3.4 hr.
Squants has built in support for 54 quantity dimensions.
UnitOfMeasure is the scale or multiplier in which the Quantity is being measured. Squants has built in support for over 257 units of measure
For each Dimension a set of UOM objects implement a primary UOM trait typed to that Quantity. The UOM objects define the unit symbols, conversion factors, and factory methods for creating Quantities in that unit.
The code for specific implementations include
- A class representing the Quantity including cross-dimensional operations
- A companion object representing the Dimension and set of available units
- A base trait for its Units
- A set of objects defining specific units, their symbols and conversion factors
This is an abbreviated example of how a Quantity type is constructed:
class Length(val value: Double, val unit: LengthUnit) extends Quantity[Length] { ... }
object Length extends Dimension[Length] { ... }
trait LengthUnit extends UnitOfMeasure[Length] { ... }
object Meters extends LengthUnit { ... }
object Yards extends LengthUnit { ... }
The apply method of the UOM objects are implemented as factories for creating Quantity values.
val len1: Length = Meters(4.3)
val len2: Length = Yards(5)
Squants currently supports 257 units of measure
Special traits are used to establish a time derivative relationship between quantities.
For example Velocity is the 1st Time Derivative of Length (Distance), Acceleration is the 2nd Time Derivative.
class Length( ... ) extends Quantity[Length] with TimeIntegral[Velocity]
...
class Velocity( ... ) extends Quantity[Velocity] with TimeDerivative[Length] with TimeIntegral[Acceleration]
...
class Acceleration( ... ) extends Quantity[Acceleration] with TimeDerivative[Velocity]
These traits provide operations with time operands which result in correct dimensional transformations.
Using these imports:
import squants.energy.Kilowatts
import squants.motion.{Acceleration, Velocity}
import squants.space.{Kilometers, Length}
import squants.space.LengthConversions._
import squants.time.{Hours, Seconds, Time}
import squants.time.TimeConversions._
You can code the following:
scala> val distance: Length = Kilometers(100)
distance: squants.space.Length = 100.0 km
scala> val time: Time = Hours(2)
time: squants.time.Time = 2.0 h
scala> val velocity: Velocity = distance / time
velocity: squants.motion.Velocity = 13.88888888888889 m/s
scala> val acc: Acceleration = velocity / Seconds(1)
acc: squants.motion.Acceleration = 13.88888888888889 m/s²
scala> val gravity = 32.feet / second.squared
gravity: squants.Acceleration = 9.7536195072 m/s²
Power is the 1st Time Derivative of Energy, PowerRamp is the 2nd.
scala> val power = Kilowatts(100)
power: squants.energy.Power = 100.0 kW
scala> val time: Time = Hours(2)
time: squants.time.Time = 2.0 h
scala> val energy = power * time
energy: squants.energy.Energy = 200000.0 Wh
scala> val ramp = Kilowatts(50) / Hours(1)
ramp: squants.energy.PowerRamp = 50000.0 W/h
The primary use case for Squants, as described above, is to produce code that is typesafe within domains that perform dimensional analysis.
This code samples in this section use these imports:
import squants.energy.Energy
import squants.energy.EnergyConversions._
import squants.energy.PowerConversions._
import squants.market.{Money, Price}
import squants.market.MoneyConversions._
import squants.market.defaultMoneyContext
import squants.mass.{Density, Mass}
import squants.mass.MassConversions._
import squants.motion.{Acceleration, Velocity, VolumeFlow}
import squants.motion.AccelerationConversions._
import squants.space.LengthConversions._
import squants.space.VolumeConversions._
import squants.time.Time
import squants.time.TimeConversions._
scala> implicit val moneyContext = defaultMoneyContext
moneyContext: squants.market.MoneyContext = MoneyContext(DefaultCurrency(USD),Currencies(ARS,AUD,BRL,BTC,CAD,CHF,CLP,CNY,CZK,DKK,ETH,EUR,GBP,HKD,INR,JPY,KRW,LTC,MXN,MYR,NAD,NOK,NZD,RUB,SEK,USD,XAG,XAU,ZAR),ExchangeRates(),AllowIndirectConversions(true))
scala> val energyPrice: Price[Energy] = 45.25.money / megawattHour
energyPrice: squants.market.Price[squants.energy.Energy] = 45.25 USD/1.0 MWh
scala> val energyUsage: Energy = 345.kilowatts * 5.4.hours
energyUsage: squants.energy.Energy = 1863000.0000000002 Wh
scala> val energyCost: Money = energyPrice * energyUsage
energyCost: squants.market.Money = 84.30075000000000905 USD
scala> val dodgeViper: Acceleration = 60.miles / hour / 3.9.seconds
dodgeViper: squants.motion.Acceleration = 6.877552216615386 m/s²
scala> val speedAfter5Seconds: Velocity = dodgeViper * 5.seconds
speedAfter5Seconds: squants.motion.Velocity = 34.38776108307693 m/s
scala> val timeTo100MPH: Time = 100.miles / hour / dodgeViper
timeTo100MPH: squants.time.Time = 6.499999999999999 s
scala> val density: Density = 1200.kilograms / cubicMeter
density: squants.mass.Density = 1200.0 kg/m³
scala> val volFlowRate: VolumeFlow = 10.gallons / minute
volFlowRate: squants.motion.VolumeFlow = 6.30901964E-4 m³/s
scala> val flowTime: Time = 30.minutes
flowTime: squants.time.Time = 30.0 m
scala> val totalMassFlow: Mass = volFlowRate * flowTime * density
totalMassFlow: squants.mass.Mass = 1362.7482422399999 kg
Another excellent use case for Squants is stronger typing for fields in your domain model.
Code samples in this section use these imports:
import scala.language.postfixOps
import squants.energy.{Energy, Power, PowerRamp}
import squants.energy.EnergyConversions._
import squants.energy.PowerConversions._
import squants.energy.PowerRampConversions._
import squants.market.Price
import squants.market.MoneyConversions._
import squants.time.Time
import squants.time.TimeConversions._
This is OK ...
case class Generator(
id: String,
maxLoadKW: Double,
rampRateKWph: Double,
operatingCostPerMWh: Double,
currency: String,
maintenanceTimeHours: Double)
val gen1 = Generator("Gen1", 5000, 7500, 75.4, "USD", 1.5)
val gen2 = Generator("Gen2", 100, 250, 2944.5, "JPY", 0.5)
... but this is much better
case class Generator(
id: String,
maxLoad: Power,
rampRate: PowerRamp,
operatingCost: Price[Energy],
maintenanceTime: Time)
val gen1 = Generator("Gen1", 5 MW, 7.5.MW/hour, 75.4.USD/MWh, 1.5 hours)
val gen2 = Generator("Gen2", 100 kW, 250 kWph, 2944.5.JPY/MWh, 30 minutes)
Create wrappers around external services that use basic types to represent quantities. Your application code then uses the ACL to communicate with that system thus eliminating the need to deal with type and scale conversions in multiple places throughout your application logic.
class ScadaServiceAnticorruption(val service: ScadaService) {
// ScadaService returns meter load as Double representing Megawatts
def getLoad: Power = Megawatts(service.getLoad(meterId))
}
// ScadaService.sendTempBias requires a Double representing Fahrenheit
def sendTempBias(temp: Temperature) =
service.sendTempBias(temp.to(Fahrenheit))
}
Implement the ACL as a trait and mix in to the application's services where needed.
import squants.radio.{Irradiance, WattsPerSquareMeter}
import squants.thermal.{Celsius, Temperature}
trait WeatherServiceAntiCorruption {
val service: WeatherService
def getTemperature: Temperature = Celsius(service.getTemperature)
def getIrradiance: Irradiance = WattsPerSquareMeter(service.getIrradiance)
}
Extend the pattern to provide multi-currency support
class MarketServiceAnticorruption(val service: MarketService)
(implicit val moneyContext: = MoneyContext) {
// MarketService.getPrice returns a Double representing $/MegawattHour
def getPrice: Price[Energy] =
(USD(service.getPrice) in moneyContext.defaultCurrency) / megawattHour
// MarketService.sendBid requires a Double representing $/MegawattHour
// and another Double representing the max amount of energy in MegawattHours
def sendBid(bid: Price[Energy], limit: Energy) =
service.sendBid((bid * megawattHour) to USD, limit to MegawattHours)
}
Build Anticorruption into Akka routers
// LoadReading message used within a Squants enabled application context
case class LoadReading(meterId: String, time: Long, load: Power)
class ScadaLoadListener(router: Router) extends Actor {
def receive = {
// ScadaLoadReading - from an external service - sends load as a string
// eg, “10.3 MW”, “345 kW”
case msg @ ScadaLoadReading(meterId, time, loadString) ⇒
// Parse the string and on success emit the Squants enabled event to routees
Power(loadString) match {
case Success(p) => router.route(LoadReading(meterId, time, p), sender())
case Failure(e) => // react to QuantityStringParseException
}
}
}
... and REST API's with contracts that require basic types
trait LoadRoute extends HttpService {
def repo: LoadRepository
val loadRoute = {
path("meter-reading") {
// REST API contract requires load value and units in different fields
// Units are string values that may be 'kW' or 'MW'
post {
parameters(meterId, time, loadDouble, unit) { (meterId, time, loadDouble, unit) =>
complete {
val load = unit match {
case "kW" => Kilowatts(loadDouble)
case "MW" => Megawatts(loadDouble)
}
repo.saveLoad(meterId, time, load)
}
}
} ~
// REST API contract requires load returned as a number representing megawatts
get {
parameters(meterId, time) { (meterId, time) =>
complete {
repo.getLoad(meterId, time) to Megawatts
}
}
}
}
}
}
- Gary Keorkunian (garyKeorkunian)
- Jeremy Apthorp (nornagon)
- Steve Barham (stevebarham)
- Derek Morr (derekmorr)
- Michael Korbakov (rmihael)
- Florian Nussberger (fnussber)
- Ajay Chandran (ajaychandran)
- Gia Bảo (giabao)
- Josh Lemer (joshlemer)
- Dave DeCarpio (DaveDeCaprio)
- Carlos Quiroz (cquiroz)
- Szabolcs Berecz (khernyo)
- Matt Hicks (darkfrog26)
- golem131 (golem131)
- Ian O'Hara (ianohara)
- Shadaj Laddad (shadaj)
- Ian McIntosh (cranst0n)
- Doug Hurst (robotsnowfall)
- Philip Axelrod (Paxelord)
Squants is a Typelevel Incubator Project and, as such, supports the Typelevel Code of Conduct.
Code is offered as-is, with no implied warranty of any kind. Comments, criticisms, and/or praise are welcome, especially from scientists, engineers and the like.
Making a release requires permission to publish to sonatype, and a properly setup signing key:
To make a release do the following:
-
Ensure the version is not set to
SNAPSHOT
-
Build the README using tut
sbt tut
- Publish a cross-version signed package (no cross-version available for Scala Native)
sbt +squantsJVM/publishSigned
sbt +squantsJS/publishSigned
sbt squantsNative/publishSigned
- Repeat for scala.js 1.0.0-RC1
SCALAJS_VERSION=1.0.0-RC1 sbt +squantsJS/publishSigned
- Then make a release (Note: after this step the release cannot be replaced)
sbt sonatypeRelease