I am trying to use the new Scala 2.10 implicit class
mechanism to convert a java.sql.ResultSet
to a scala.collection.immutable.Stream
. In Scala 2.9 I use the following code, which works:
/**
* Implicitly convert a ResultSet to a Stream[ResultSet]. The Stream can then be
* traversed using the usual methods map, filter, etc.
*
* @param resultSet the Result to convert
* @return a Stream wrapped around the ResultSet
*/
implicit def resultSet2Stream(resultSet: ResultSet): Stream[ResultSet] = {
if (resultSet.next) Stream.cons(resultSet, resultSet2Stream(resultSet))
else {
resultSet.close()
Stream.empty
}
}
I can then use it like this:
val resultSet = statement.executeQuery("SELECT * FROM foo")
resultSet.map {
row => /* ... */
}
The implicit class
that I came up with looks like this:
/**
* Implicitly convert a ResultSet to a Stream[ResultSet]. The Stream can then be
* traversed using the usual map, filter, etc.
*/
implicit class ResultSetStream(val row: ResultSet)
extends AnyVal {
def toStream: Stream[ResultSet] = {
if (row.next) Stream.cons(row, row.toStream)
else {
row.close()
Stream.empty
}
}
}
However, now I must call toStream
on the ResultSet
, which sort of defeats the "implicit" part:
val resultSet = statement.executeQuery("SELECT * FROM foo")
resultSet.toStream.map {
row => /* ... */
}
What am I doing wrong?
Should I still be using the implicit def
and import scala.language.implicitConversions
to avoid the "features" warning?
UPDATE
Here is an alternative solution that converts the ResultSet
into a scala.collection.Iterator
(only Scala 2.10+):
/*
* Treat a java.sql.ResultSet as an Iterator, allowing operations like filter,
* map, etc.
*
* Sample usage:
* val resultSet = statement.executeQuery("...")
* resultSet.map {
* resultSet =>
* // ...
* }
*/
implicit class ResultSetIterator(resultSet: ResultSet)
extends Iterator[ResultSet] {
def hasNext: Boolean = resultSet.next()
def next() = resultSet
}
toStream
method is better than an invisible implicit.