From 28b2d0c13aba7156431076119c920c7dcee6dc77 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Paul Phillips Date: Sun, 5 Feb 2012 22:39:08 -0800 Subject: Revert "Added a rootdoc page for the compiler API scaladoc" This reverts commit e34098b7f6e37420198fa5c7c2820d0443b46cc4. --- src/library/rootdoc.txt | 27 --------------------------- 1 file changed, 27 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 src/library/rootdoc.txt (limited to 'src/library') diff --git a/src/library/rootdoc.txt b/src/library/rootdoc.txt deleted file mode 100644 index 6145429f1e..0000000000 --- a/src/library/rootdoc.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,27 +0,0 @@ -This is the documentation for the Scala standard library. - -== Package structure == - -The [[scala]] package contains core types. - -scala.[[scala.collection]] and its subpackages contain a collections framework with higher-order functions for manipulation. Both [[scala.collection.immutable]] and [[scala.collection.mutable]] data structures are available, with immutable as the default. The [[scala.collection.parallel]] collections provide automatic parallel operation. - -Other important packages include: - - - scala.[[scala.actors]] - Concurrency framework inspired by Erlang. - - scala.[[scala.io]] - Input and output. - - scala.[[scala.math]] - Basic math functions and additional numeric types. - - scala.[[scala.sys]] - Interaction with other processes and the operating system. - - scala.util.[[scala.util.matching]] - Pattern matching in text using regular expressions. - - scala.util.parsing.[[scala.util.parsing.combinator]] - Composable combinators for parsing. - - scala.[[scala.xml]] - XML parsing, manipulation, and serialization. - -Many other packages exist. See the complete list on the left. - -== Automatic imports == - -Identifiers in the scala package and the [[scala.Predef]] object are always in scope by default. - -Some of these identifiers are type aliases provided as shortcuts to commonly used classes. For example, List is an alias for scala.collection.immutable.[[scala.collection.immutable.List]]. - -Other aliases refer to classes providing by the underlying platform. For example, on the JVM, String is an alias for java.lang.String. -- cgit v1.2.3