I want to issue a native system command from a Scala program, and perhaps trap the output. ("ls" comes to mind. There may be other ways to get directory information without issuing the command, but that's beside the point of my question.) It would correspond to os.system(...) in Python.
I've looked in "Programming in Scala". I've looked in O'Reilly's "Programming Scala". I've Googled several combinations of terms. No luck yet. Can someone out there give me an开发者_如何学Python example, or point me at a resource where I can find an example?
Best way to do that is to use scala.sys.process.
import scala.sys.process._
val vimLocation: String = "whereis vim" !!
reference
Scala is not different from Java in this area, since you can call any Java API functions using Scala's interop features. See for example, java.lang.ProcessBuilder
.
You can do it using sys.process
easily:
Executing system commands and getting their status code (exit code):
import sys.process._
val result = "your_command" !
println("result = "+result) // result contain zero for success or non zero for fail
Getting output from system commands:
import sys.process._
val result = "your_command" !!
println("result = "+result) // result contain output from the command
You have several other options (pipeline, Redirect STDOUT, Append to STDOUT and ...), you can see this link.
Scala has complete interoperability with Java. So you can call the system commands from Scala as you would from Java. See this to see how to call system commands from Java.
精彩评论