Scala Libraries for Linux

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Browse free open source Scala Libraries for Linux and projects below. Use the toggles on the left to filter open source Scala Libraries for Linux by OS, license, language, programming language, and project status.

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  • 1
    Scala 2

    Scala 2

    Scala 2 compiler and standard library

    Scala combines object-oriented and functional programming in one concise, high-level language. Scala's static types help avoid bugs in complex applications, and its JVM and JavaScript runtimes let you build high-performance systems with easy access to huge ecosystems of libraries. Scastie is Scala + sbt in your browser! You can use any version of Scala, or even alternate backends such as Dotty, Scala.js, Scala Native, and Typelevel Scala. You can use any published library. You can save and share Scala programs/builds with anybody. The Scala Library Index (or Scaladex) is a representation of a map of all published Scala libraries. With Scaladex, a developer can now query more than 175,000 releases of Scala libraries. Scaladex is officially supported by Scala Center. In Scala, functions are values, and can be defined as anonymous functions with a concise syntax. In Scala, case classes are used to represent structural data types.
    Downloads: 12 This Week
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  • 2
    Alpakka Kafka

    Alpakka Kafka

    Alpakka is a Reactive Enterprise Integration library for Java

    The Alpakka project is an open source initiative to implement stream-aware and reactive integration pipelines for Java and Scala. It is built on top of Akka Streams and has been designed from the ground up to understand streaming natively and provide a DSL for reactive and stream-oriented programming, with built-in support for backpressure. Akka Streams is a Reactive Stream and JDK 9+ java.util.concurrent.Flow-compliant implementation and therefore fully interoperable with other implementations. As Kafka’s client protocol negotiates the version to use with the Kafka broker, you may use a Kafka client version that is different than the Kafka broker’s version.
    Downloads: 8 This Week
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  • 3
    Synapse Machine Learning

    Synapse Machine Learning

    Simple and distributed Machine Learning

    SynapseML (previously MMLSpark) is an open source library to simplify the creation of scalable machine learning pipelines. SynapseML builds on Apache Spark and SparkML to enable new kinds of machine learning, analytics, and model deployment workflows. SynapseML adds many deep learning and data science tools to the Spark ecosystem, including seamless integration of Spark Machine Learning pipelines with the Open Neural Network Exchange (ONNX), LightGBM, The Cognitive Services, Vowpal Wabbit, and OpenCV. These tools enable powerful and highly-scalable predictive and analytical models for a variety of data sources. SynapseML also brings new networking capabilities to the Spark Ecosystem. With the HTTP on Spark project, users can embed any web service into their SparkML models. For production-grade deployment, the Spark Serving project enables high throughput, sub-millisecond latency web services, backed by your Spark cluster.
    Downloads: 6 This Week
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  • 4
    Slick database

    Slick database

    Slick (Scala Language Integrated Connection Kit) is a modern database

    Slick is a modern database query and access library for Scala. It allows you to work with stored data almost as if you were using Scala collections while at the same time giving you full control over when a database access happens and which data is transferred. You can write your database queries in Scala instead of SQL, thus profiting from the static checking, compile-time safety and compositionality of Scala. Slick features an extensible query compiler which can generate code for different backends. It allows you to work with relational databases almost as if you were using Scala collections, while at the same time giving you full control over when a database access happens and what data is transferred. By writing your queries in Scala you can benefit from the static type checking, compile-time safety, and compositionality of Scala, while retaining the ability to drop down to raw SQL where needed for custom or advanced database features.
    Downloads: 5 This Week
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  • 5
    Caliban

    Caliban

    Functional GraphQL library for Scala

    Caliban is a purely functional library for building GraphQL servers and clients in Scala. The design principles behind the library are the following. Minimal amount of boilerplate: no need to manually define a schema for every type in your API. Pure interface: errors and effects are returned explicitly (no exceptions thrown), all returned types are referentially transparent (no Future). Clean separation between schema definition and implementation: schema is defined and validated at compile time using Scala standard types, resolver (RootResolver) is a simple value provided at runtime. All interfaces are pure and types are referentially transparent. Schemas are type safe and derived at compile time. No need to manually define a schema for every type in your API. Let the compiler do the boring work. Out-of-the-box support for major HTTP server libraries, effect types, Json libraries and more.
    Downloads: 4 This Week
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  • 6
    FS2

    FS2

    Compositional, streaming I/O library for Scala

    FS2 (“Functional Streams for Scala”) is a purely functional, effectful abstraction for stream processing on the JVM. Built on Cats Effect, it enables compositional resource-safe streaming workflows with robust error handling, back-pressure, pull/push semantics, and support for concurrent and interruptible pipelines.
    Downloads: 4 This Week
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  • 7
    Kamon Telemetry

    Kamon Telemetry

    Distributed Tracing, Metrics and Context Propagation for applications

    Kamon Telemetry is a set of libraries for instrumenting applications running on the JVM. With Kamon Telemetry you can collect metrics, propagate context across threads and services, and get distributed traces automatically. The best way to get started is by following our installation guides and taking it from there. Have fun with Kamon. Monitor your backend applications, fix performance issues, and get alerted when problems happen. All without being a monitoring expert. Everybody starts monitoring with logs because they are there by default. Just connect to your server and start tailing. But logs have a hard time showing you the overall response times for your application, or whether certain calls to the database are happening in sequence or parallel (among a million other things).
    Downloads: 4 This Week
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  • 8
    Sangria

    Sangria

    Scala GraphQL implementation

    Sangria is a Scala GraphQL implementation. It is an example of GraphQL server written with Play framework and Sangria. It also serves as a playground, where you can interactively execute GraphQL queries and play with some examples. If you want to use sangria with a react-relay framework, then you also may be interested in sangria-relay. Sangria is a spec-compliant GraphQL implementation, so it works out of the box with Apollo, Relay, GraphiQL and other GraphQL tools and libraries. Since GraphQL has a type system, the server defines a schema that the client can query using the introspection API. This provides the client with a set of possibilities. After the client got this information and decided which parts of the data it needs, it is able to describe its data requirements in form of a GraphQL query. An important aspect of GraphQL is that it’s completely backend agnostic.
    Downloads: 4 This Week
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  • 9
    Refined

    Refined

    Refinement types for Scala

    Refined is a Scala library that enhances types with compile-time constraints using predicate-style refinement types. It allows embedding validation logic into types like Refined[Int, Positive], ensuring invalid values are rejected at compile or runtime, thereby increasing safety and reducing boilerplate in domain modeling.
    Downloads: 3 This Week
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    See Project
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  • 10
    Skunk

    Skunk

    A data access library for Scala + Postgres

    Skunk is a Postgres library for Scala. Skunk is powered by cats, cats-effect, scodec, and fs2. Skunk is purely functional, non-blocking, and provides a tagless-final API. Skunk gives very good error messages. Skunk embraces the Scala Code of Conduct. Skunk is pre-release software! Code and documentation are under active development! Skunk is published for Scala 2.12/2.13/3.1 and can be included in your project.Query and Command types are usually inferrable, but specifying a type ensures that the chosen encoders and decoders are consistent with the expected input and output Scala types. Postgres provides a protocol for execution of simple queries, returning all rows at once (Skunk returns them as a list).
    Downloads: 3 This Week
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  • 11
    scalajs-react

    scalajs-react

    Facebook's React on Scala.JS

    Scala.js React wraps Facebook React for Scala.js with a strong emphasis on type safety and functional idioms. It provides a typed virtual DOM interface, reusable components, hooks, and utilities for routing, testing, SSR, and performance profiling, all aligned with Cats, Cats Effect, and Monocle ecosystems.
    Downloads: 3 This Week
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  • 12
    tapir

    tapir

    Declarative, type-safe web endpoints library

    Declarative, type-safe web endpoints library. With tapir, you can describe HTTP API endpoints as immutable Scala values. Each endpoint can contain a number of input and output parameters. Compile-time guarantees, develop-time completions, read-time information. Separate the shape of the endpoint (the "what"), from the server logic (the "how"). Generate documentation from endpoint descriptions. Leverage the metadata to report rich metrics and tracing information. Re-use common endpoint definitions, as well as individual inputs/outputs. Library, not a framework, integrates with your stack. Is your company already using tapir? We're continually expanding the "adopters" section in the documentation; the more the merrier! It would be great to feature your company's logo, but in order to do that, we'll need to write permission to avoid any legal misunderstandings.
    Downloads: 3 This Week
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  • 13
    Binding.scala

    Binding.scala

    Reactive data-binding for Scala

    Binding.scala is a data-binding library for Scala, running on both JVM and Scala.js. Binding.scala can be used as the basis of UI frameworks, however latest Binding.scala 12.x does not contain any build-in UI frameworks anymore. For creating reactive HTML UI, you may want to check out html.scala, which is a UI framework based on Binding.scala, and it is also the successor of the previously built-in dom library. See also React / Binding.scala / html.scala Interoperability for using existing React components with Binding.scala. Regular HTML does not compile unless developers manually replace class and for attributes to className and htmlFor, and manually convert inline styles from CSS syntax to JSON syntax.
    Downloads: 2 This Week
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  • 14
    Algebird

    Algebird

    Abstract Algebra for Scala

    Algebird is Twitter’s Apache‑licensed Scala library providing abstract algebra data structures and algorithms, especially for online/streaming aggregation. It includes Monoid, Approximate, HyperLogLog, CMS, BloomFilter, Min/Max, Averaged Value types, supporting efficient distributed aggregation and approximate analytics.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 15
    Ammonite

    Ammonite

    Scala Scripting

    Ammonite is a modern Scala REPL and scripting tool designed to give Scala users a more interactive and flexible REPL experience and to free them from heavyweight project boilerplate. It provides syntax‐highlighting, multiline editing, auto‐completion, and dynamic importing of dependencies (using a magic import syntax like import $ivy…). Instead of having to set up an sbt project for many small tasks, one can write Scala scripts (with .sc extension) and run them directly, with Ammonite handling compilation and execution transparently. In the REPL, Ammonite can survive compiler errors (by restarting the compiler internally) and preserve session state, improving resilience compared to the default Scala REPL. It also integrates filesystem utilities and command-line abstractions (via Ammonite-Ops) so that common shell tasks become more Scala-native.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 16
    Cats

    Cats

    Lightweight, modular, extensible library for functional programming

    Cats is a library which provides abstractions for functional programming in the Scala programming language. The name is a playful shortening of the word category. Scala supports both object-oriented and functional programming, and this is reflected in the hybrid approach of the standard library. Cats strives to provide functional programming abstractions that are core, binary compatible, modular, approachable and efficient. A broader goal of Cats is to provide a foundation for an ecosystem of pure, typeful libraries to support functional programming in Scala applications. Cats strives to provide a solid and stable foundation for an ecosystem of FP libraries. Thus, we treat backward binary compatibility maintenance with a high priority. In semantic versioning, backward breaking change is only allowed between major versions.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 17
    Cats Effect

    Cats Effect

    The pure asynchronous runtime for Scala

    Cats-Effect is a high-quality functional programming library for Scala that provides a principled way to represent and manage side effects, particularly asynchronous and concurrent computations. It is part of the broader Typelevel ecosystem and builds on the abstractions from Cats (such as Functor, Monad, etc.). The core abstraction is the IO type (or effect types more generally), which encodes effectful computations in a pure, referentially transparent way. Cats-Effect offers capabilities like deferred execution, cancellation, resource safety (Resource), fiber concurrency (lightweight threads), and interoperation with underlying runtime platforms (JVM, Java concurrency, etc.). It enables developers to write effectful code while preserving composability, purity, and modular reasoning about side effects.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 18
    CoolplaySpark

    CoolplaySpark

    Spark Cool Play: Spark source code analysis, Spark class library, etc.

    CoolplaySpark is a learning and practice repository designed to help users understand and work with Apache Spark. It serves as a companion resource for the book 深入理解Spark核心思想与源码分析 (In-Depth Understanding of Spark’s Core Concepts and Source Code Analysis). The project contains annotated examples, explanations, and exercises that guide learners through Spark’s architecture, execution model, and source code internals. It is particularly valuable for developers who want to strengthen their understanding of Spark by not only using it as a data processing engine but also exploring how its internals function. Through code analysis and commentary, CoolplaySpark helps readers connect theoretical concepts with practical implementation details. By combining book study with this repository, learners can develop both conceptual clarity and hands-on expertise in Spark’s core components.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 19
    Deequ

    Deequ

    Deequ is a library built on top of Apache Spark

    Deequ is a library built atop Apache Spark that enables defining “unit tests for data” — that is, formal constraints or checks on datasets to ensure data quality along dimensions such as completeness, uniqueness, value ranges, correlations, etc. It can scale to large datasets (billions of rows) by translating those data checks into Spark jobs. Deequ supports advanced features like a metrics repository for storing computed statistics over time, anomaly detection of data quality metrics, and the suggestion of likely constraints automatically for new datasets. It also includes a little domain-specific language called DQDL (Data Quality Definition Language) which allows declarative specification of quality rules. Users typically run Deequ before feeding data downstream (to ML pipelines, analytics, or production systems), enabling early detection and isolation of data errors. There is also a Python wrapper, PyDeequ, for users who prefer working from Python environments.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 20
    Monix

    Monix

    Asynchronous, Reactive Programming for Scala and Scala.js

    Monix is a high-performance, reactive, and asynchronous programming library for Scala and Scala.js. Built as a Typelevel project, it provides advanced abstractions like Task, Observable, Iterant, and Coeval, enabling compositional, back-pressure‑aware event-driven systems that integrate cleanly with Cats Effect and Reactive Streams.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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    See Project
  • 21
    SageMaker Spark

    SageMaker Spark

    A Spark library for Amazon SageMaker

    SageMaker Spark is an open-source Spark library for Amazon SageMaker. With SageMaker Spark you construct Spark ML Pipelines using Amazon SageMaker stages. These pipelines interleave native Spark ML stages and stages that interact with SageMaker training and model hosting. With SageMaker Spark, you can train on Amazon SageMaker from Spark DataFrames using Amazon-provided ML algorithms like K-Means clustering or XGBoost, and make predictions on DataFrames against SageMaker endpoints hosting your trained models, and, if you have your own ML algorithms built into SageMaker compatible Docker containers, you can use SageMaker Spark to train and infer on DataFrames with your own algorithms -- all at Spark scale. SageMaker Spark depends on hadoop-aws-2.8.1. To run Spark applications that depend on SageMaker Spark, you need to build Spark with Hadoop 2.8. However, if you are running Spark applications on EMR, you can use Spark built with Hadoop 2.7.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 22
    Scala Steward

    Scala Steward

    A bot that helps you keep your projects up-to-date

    Scala Steward is an automated tool that helps to keep Scala libraries and plugins up to date by checking for dependency updates and sending pull requests.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 23
    Scalaz

    Scalaz

    Principled Functional Programming in Scala

    Scalaz is a foundational functional-programming library for Scala that provides type classes, data types, and syntax to write pure, composable code. It implements classic abstractions such as Functor, Applicative, Monad, Monoid, Foldable, and Traverse, along with powerful transformers (ReaderT, StateT, WriterT, OptionT, and more) to structure effects. The library offers rich data structures—\/ (disjunction), Validation, NonEmptyList, IList, and Free—that help model errors, invariants, and interpretable programs. Its type class–oriented design lets you write generic algorithms over capabilities rather than concrete types, improving reuse and testability. Scalaz also contributes optics, equality/ordering abstractions, and lawful instances with property-based tests to ensure algebraic laws hold. While the Scala ecosystem now includes sibling projects, Scalaz remains a deep toolbox for principled FP in Scala and a reference point for category-theory-inspired design on the JVM.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 24
    Scaloid

    Scaloid

    Scaloid makes your Android code easy to understand and maintain

    Scaloid is a Scala library designed to make Android app development in Scala more concise, idiomatic, and less verbose compared to using the standard Android APIs. It provides wrappers, syntactic sugar, and implicit conversions so that interacting with Android UI elements, layouts, intents, and other Android primitives feels more natural to Scala developers. For example, it offers DSL-style helpers for defining views and layouts with less boilerplate, implicit conversions to help with event listeners, and utility methods to simplify common tasks. Scaloid aims to capture the expressiveness of Scala—higher-order methods, implicit conversions, extension methods—to let Android development be more functional and succinct. It lowers friction for Scala developers targeting Android, making UI code more compact and composable while still maintaining access to full Android platform capabilities.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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    See Project
  • 25
    Spray

    Spray

    Scala libraries for building and consuming RESTful web services

    Spray is a suite of Scala libraries built on top of Akka that offers a modular, asynchronous, and non-blocking toolkit for building and consuming RESTful and HTTP services. The core philosophy behind Spray is that it should act as a “library” for integration and HTTP layers, not as a full application framework—it gives you the building blocks to handle HTTP and REST but doesn’t impose heavy structure. It includes modules for low-level HTTP I/O, routing, client and server APIs, HTTP model (requests/responses), (un)marshalling, servlet adapters, and testing utilities. Its routing DSL offers expressive combinators for defining HTTP endpoints, and its testkit allows route logic to be tested in isolation (even without spinning up actors). It was popular in earlier Scala/Akka stacks but has since been superseded by Akka HTTP as the maintained successor.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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    See Project
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