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-\documentclass[a4paper,12pt,twoside,titlepage]{book}
-
-\usepackage{scaladoc}
-\usepackage{fleqn}
-\usepackage{modefs}
-\usepackage{math}
-\usepackage{scaladefs}
-\renewcommand{\todo}[1]{}
-
-
-
-\ifpdf
- \pdfinfo {
- /Author (Martin Odersky)
- /Title (Programming in Scala)
- /Keywords (Scala)
- /Subject ()
- /Creator (TeX)
- /Producer (PDFLaTeX)
- }
-\fi
-
-\renewcommand{\doctitle}{Programming in Scala\\[33mm]\ }
-\renewcommand{\docauthor}{Martin Odersky\\[53mm]\ }
-
-\begin{document}
-
-\frontmatter
-\makedoctitle
-\clearemptydoublepage
-\tableofcontents
-\mainmatter
-\sloppy
-
-\part{Rationale}
-
-\input{RationalePart}
-
-\paragraph{Acknowledgments}
-Many people have contributed to the definition and implementation of
-the Scala language and to parts of this book. First of all, I would
-like to thank the Scala team at EPFL consisting of Philippe Altherr,
-Vincent Cremet, Burak Emir, St\'ephane Micheloud, Nikolay Mihaylov,
-Michel Schinz, Erik Stenman, and Matthias Zenger. They put a lot of
-effort in the Scala compiler, tools, and documentation and have
-contributed in an essential way to the specification of the Scala
-language through many observations, clever suggestions, and
-discussions. Members of the team have also contributed examples in
-this book, as well as parts of the specification. Phil Bagwell, Gilad
-Bracha, Erik Ernst, Erik Mejer, Benjamin Pierce, Enno Runne, and Phil
-Wadler have given very useful feedback on the Scala design.
-
-The documentation ows a great debt to Abelson's and Sussman's
-wonderful book ``Structure and Interpretation of Computer
-Programs''\cite{abelson-sussman:structure}. I have adapted several of
-their examples and exercises in the ``Scala By Example'' part of this
-book. Of course, the working language has in each case been changed
-from Scheme to Scala. Furthermore, the examples make use of Scala's
-object-oriented constructs where appropriate.
-
-\part{Scala by Example}
-
-Scala is a programming language that fuses elements from
-object-oriented and functional programming. This part introduces Scala
-in an informal way, through a sequence of examples.
-
-Chapters~\ref{chap:example-one} and \ref{chap:example-auction}
-highlight some of the features that make Scala interesting. The
-following chapters introduce the language constructs of Scala in a
-more thorough way, starting with simple expressions and functions, and
-working up through objects and classes, lists and streams, mutable
-state, pattern matching to more complete examples that show
-interesting programming techniques. The present informal exposition is
-complemented by the Scala Language Reference Manual which specifies
-Scala in a more detailed and precise way.
-
-\input{ExamplesPart}
-
-\part{The Scala Language Specification \\ \ \\ \Large Version 1.0}
-
-\input{ReferencePart}
-
-\bibliographystyle{alpha}
-\bibliography{Scala}
-
-\input{ReferencePartAppendix}
-
-
-\end{document}