Question says it all.
(Yet, the details of how to get access to the shift
and reset
operations has changed over the years. Old blog entries and Stack Overflow answers may have out of date information.)
See also What are Scala continuations and why use them? which talks about what you might want to do with shift
and reset
once you have them.
Scala 2.11
The easiest way is to use sbt:
scalaVersion := "2.11.6" autoCompilerPlugins := true addCompilerPlugin( "org.scala-lang.plugins" % "scala-continuations-plugin_2.11.6" % "1.0.2") libraryDependencies += "org.scala-lang.plugins" %% "scala-continuations-library" % "1.0.2" scalacOptions += "-P:continuations:enable"
In your code (or the REPL), do import scala.util.continuations._
You can now use shift
and reset
to your heart's content.
historical information for Scala 2.8, 2.9, 2.10
You have to start scala (or scalac) with the -P:continuations:enable
flag.
In your code, do import scala.util.continuations._
You can now use shift
and reset
to your heart's content.
If you're using sbt 0.7, see https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/simple-build-tool/Uj-7zl9n3f4
If you're using sbt 0.11+, see https://gist.github.com/1302944
If you're using maven, see http://scala-programming-language.1934581.n4.nabble.com/scala-using-continuations-plugin-with-2-8-0-RC1-and-maven-td2065949.html#a2065949
Non SBT solution:
scala -Xpluginsdir /.../scala/lib/ -P:continuations:enable
Works on scala 2.11.6, but the plugin/library said that it will no longer be included with Scala 2.12
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