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Can someone please tell me what is wrong with this function definition?

def incr[Int](l: List[Int]): List[Int] = 
  l.foldRight(List[Int]())((x,z) => (x+1) :: z)

Scala compiler is complaining about type mismatch in the body of the function passed to foldRight:

<console>:8: error: type mismatch;
 found   : Int(1)
 required: String
           l.foldRight(List[Int]())((x,z) => (x+1) :: z)
                                                ^

What is the problem here?

2 Answers 2

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With def incr[Int] you've defined an arbitrary type with the name Int, which overrides the existing one. Get rid of the [Int] type parameter and it works fine, or use a different name like T.

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  • Same error with this: def incr[T](l: List[T]): List[T] = l.foldRight(List[T]())((x,z) => (x+1) :: z) still don't understand (?) Nov 20, 2012 at 4:25
  • 1
    Sorry to be so dense, stupid, got it. Thanks. def incr(l: List[Int]): List[Int] = l.foldRight(List[Int]())((x,z) => (x+1) :: z) Nov 20, 2012 at 12:30
  • @Bill an arbitrary type doesn't have a + method, which is why either your element type needs to be Int or the function you pass to foldRight needs to work on Any. I'm not exactly sure why this exact error message is produced but it's probably something to do with the compiler thinking + is the method for concatenating Strings. It would be nice if the compiler gave you a warning though about shadowing types. Nov 20, 2012 at 12:56
  • Yeah - I was working through the exercises in a book (Functional Programming in Scala) that I just bought and became so used to introducing type parameters that I became blinded for the moment. I realized my error as soon as I shutdown for the evening. A relaxed mind thinks so much more clearly... :-) Nov 20, 2012 at 14:01
2

What Luigi says works for me. I'm not sure why you would want the type parameter since you're already specifying the input as a List of Int:

def incr(l: List[Int]): List[Int] = l.foldRight(List[Int]())((x,z) => (x+1) :: z)

incr(List(1,2,3))                 //> res0: List[Int] = List(2, 3, 4)

But on a sidenote and not related to the actual question, if that's the intended outcome, an alternative way could be:

def incr2(l:List[Int]):List[Int] = l map (_+1)

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