Scala has far more flexibility in choosing the visibility of something than Java, though some of Java visibility rules, related to nested classes are not translatable into Scala.
And, yes, there is package-private in Scala. It is written as private[package]
in Scala.
The reason why Scala makes public
the default is because it is the most common visibility used. The "extra typing" is actually less typing, because it is far more uncommon to make members private or protected.
One exception to that rule in Java is fields, which should be made private so one may be able to change details of implementation without breaking clients. One practical consequence of this are classes with fields and then getters and setters for each field.
In Scala, because one may be able to replace a val
or a var
with corresponding def
, this is not needed.