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Home/ Questions/Q 3673112
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 19, 20262026-05-19T02:41:33+00:00 2026-05-19T02:41:33+00:00

I’m coming from a PHP/Python/Javascript background, and recently became very interested in Scala –

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I’m coming from a PHP/Python/Javascript background, and recently became very interested in Scala – specifically Akka coming from the web standpoint.

I’m having an extremely hard time though with general workflow, issues compared to interpreted languages such as the ones I described.

In general I tend to code, test results, code and repeat. This comes to a standstill when even changing a single line in a 20 line class takes up to 30secs to compile and run. Is this really normal? Do I need to just build, build, build then go back 30 minutes or an hour later and compile/test?

(I’m using IDEA with SBT) Do I need to specifically learn how to use Maven other than linking to the repos?

Thoughts? Advice?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-19T02:41:33+00:00Added an answer on May 19, 2026 at 2:41 am

    I think you’re on the right track with Idea and SBT. Have you tried

    ~compile
    

    That will detect changes to your source automatically. For web applications, you can do a

    jetty-run
    

    followed by

    ~prepare-webapp
    

    To continuously compile and redeploy your app to jetty. Makes Scala dev feel a lot like Python web development.

    Usually I’ve found SBT to be very fast when compiling, especially the size file you’re talking about. By the time I save my change and go to my SBT prompt, it’s done.

    Another handy SBT aspect is the REPL which will load your project and its dependencies:

    console
    

    You can reload any compiled changes with

    :replay
    

    in the scala REPL.

    EDIT:
    Guess I should mention that you can play around with a simple class with a main method. If you create a file called src/main/scala/Foo.scala that looks like this:

    object Foo {
      def main(args: Array[String]) {
        println("Hello World")
      }
    }
    

    And a file project/build/Build.scala like this:

    import sbt._
    class Build(info: ProjectInfo) extends DefaultProject(info) {
      override def mainClass = Some("Foo")
    }
    

    Then at the sbt prompt, you can do

    ~run
    

    To continuously compile and run the Foo.main method. You may need to do a ‘reload’ in sbt first. It seemed to take 2-3 seconds from saving change to seeing output. Then you just edit away, save and see changes. It’s a pretty good workflow.

    Also, don’t forget the REPL – definitely a critical tool for learning Scala. You can learn a ton just playing with it interactively.

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