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I read that there is no package-private (default in Java) in scala and use public access by default.

What are the rationale for this choice? Is it a good practice as the default public access make everything visible, hence part of the API?

This means extra typing to encapsulate the fields and methods (whether it be private, scoped private, protected, access).

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In Java it’s far easier to choose ‘package-private’ as the default because it is one out of only three possibilities there.

In Scala you can choose between public access (public), package-private access with inheritance (protected[C]), package-private access without inheritance (private[C]), class-private access (private), object-private access (private[this]), inheritance access (protected), protected[this] access (whatever you may call it) and, additionally, you have some kind of file-private access modifier (sealed).

It’s hard to select a default from that other than public.

(Considering inner methods, one could also add method-private to the list…)

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    You raised a valid point, still I would say, though scala give more and better (consistency in protected scope) choice, the default should be something which hides the implementation. In that sense, package-private access without inheritance (private[C]) in your statement. I don't mind typing extra and agree it is easy with IDE, still wondering better rationale of the choice.
    – bsr
    Jan 11, 2011 at 11:59
  • But then how often would you need private[C]? And also, since you can nest packages, which package or class would C be? The outermost would be useless, the innermost would be the class where the member is defined, so it’d be simply private. Still a valid option of course; it’s especially the package thing which gets tricky.
    – Debilski
    Jan 11, 2011 at 12:39
  • But well, it’s hard to argue anyway because it’s just the way it it and it’s not as bad as it might seem.
    – Debilski
    Jan 11, 2011 at 12:52
  • thanks.. i will wait for some more response, as all the feature in scala is well thought, this too could be the same.. I am still learning..
    – bsr
    Jan 11, 2011 at 14:18
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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.

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    it is far more uncommon to make members private or protected it may be true for attributes with getters and/or setters, but I disagree in the general case. There are much more private implementation details than public API, because the API exposes higher level methods
    – Dici
    Jun 11, 2016 at 8:19
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This is something that gives a lot of people some trouble. I'd suggest giving this entry (actually the entire series) a read.

Immutability also prevents any of the funnies that generally occur with such access. It might be true that "there is more typing", but looking at IDEs, they are responsible for a lot of fud as any generated method by the IDE is usually public, which is not always valid either.

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According to Programming Scala, it seems like the default public is mainly due to the uniform access principle, where operator overloading allow one to define the getter as field = newvalue

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  • well.. actually I read here (joelabrahamsson.com/entry/…) that the compiler insert a getter for uniform access. But stil the accessor is public
    – bsr
    Jan 11, 2011 at 10:59
  • For uniform access principle it should suffice that default access levels for fields and methods are equal, they don't need to both be public. Jan 11, 2011 at 12:11

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