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Home/ Questions/Q 3661122
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 19, 20262026-05-19T01:16:20+00:00 2026-05-19T01:16:20+00:00

I want to write a Scala script to recursively process all files in a

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I want to write a Scala script to recursively process all files in a directory. For each file I’d like to see if there are any cases where a string occurs at line X and line X – 2. If a case like that occurs I’d like to stop processing that file, and add that filename to a map of filenames to occurrence counts. I just started learning Scala today, I’ve got the file recurse code working, and need some help with the string searching, here’s what I have so far:


import java.io.File
import scala.io.Source

val s1= "CmdNum = 506"
val s2 = "Data = [0000,]"

def processFile(f: File) {
  val lines = scala.io.Source.fromFile(f).getLines.toArray
  for (i = 0 to lines.length - 1) {
    // want to do string searches here, see if line contains s1 and line two lines above also contains s1
    //println(lines(i))
  }
}

def recursiveListFiles(f: File): Array[File] = {
  val these = f.listFiles
  if (these != null) {
    for (i = 0 to these.length - 1) {
      if (these(i).isFile) {
        processFile(these(i))
      }
    }
    these ++ these.filter(_.isDirectory).flatMap(recursiveListFiles)
  }
  else {
    Array[File]()
  }
}

println(recursiveListFiles(new File(args(0))))
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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-19T01:16:20+00:00Added an answer on May 19, 2026 at 1:16 am

    You can do something like this:

    def processFile(f: File) {
      val src = Source.fromFile(f)
      val hit = src.getLines().sliding(3).exists{ 
        case List(l0, l1, l2) => l0.contains(s1) && l2.contains(s1)
        case _ => false
      }
      src.close
      // do something depending on hit like adding to a Map
    }
    

    First you don’t need to convert to an array, you can preserve the iterator to only read the lines necessary to find a match.

    You can use sliding to get a derived iterator using a sliding window of 3 lines where you look for the string on line i and i+2.

    exists tests whether an element of this sliding iterator satisfy a predicate. The case will pattern match the 3 lines from the sliding window element into 3 vals for convenience. I had to use the REPL to find out what type the sliding was really returning.

    Finally don’t forget to close src.

    If you need the occurrence count:

      val count = src.getLines().sliding(3).filter{ 
        case List(l0, l1, l2) => l0.contains(s1) && l2.contains(s1)
        case _ => false
      }.size
    

    You filter the occurrences and then get the size…

    edited for match error on files shorter than 3 lines

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