Suppose I have a simple case class that wraps integers, and a higher order method that accepts a function carrying integers to wrappers.
case class Wrapper(x :Int)
def higherOrder(f : Int => Wrapper) = println(f(42))
Then, I can call the higher order function, passing in the wrapper's generated apply function. Amazingly, I can also just pass in the wrapper's name.
higherOrder(Wrapper.apply) // okay
higherOrder(Wrapper) // okay, wow!
This is really cool. It allows us to treat the name of the case class as a function, which fosters expressive abstractions. For an example of this coolness, see the answer here. What does "abstract over" mean?
Now suppose my case class isn't powerful enough, and I need to create an extractor instead. As a mildly contrived use case, let's say I need to be able to pattern match on strings that parse into integers.
// Replace Wrapper case class with an extractor
object Wrapper {
def apply(x :Int) = new Wrapper(x)
def unapply(s :String) :Option[Wrapper] = {
// details elided
}
}
class Wrapper(x :Int) {
override def toString = "Wrapper(" + x + ")"
// other methods elided
}
Under this change, I can still pass Wrapper.apply into my higher order function, but passing in just Wrapper no longer works.
higherOrder(Wrapper.apply) // still okay
higherOrder(Wrapper) // DOES NOT COMPILE
^^^^^^^
// type mismatch; found : Wrapper.type (with underlying type Wrapper)
// required: (Int) => Wrapper
Ouch! Here's why this asymmetry is troubling. The advice of Odersky, Spoon, and Venners (Programming in Scala, page 500), says
You could always start with case classes, and then, if the need arises, change to extractors. Because patterns over extractors and patterns over case classes look exactly the same in Scala, pattern matches in your clients will continue to work.
Quite true of course, but we'll break our clients if they are using case class names as functions. And since doing so enables powerful abstractions, some surely will.
So, when passing them into higher order functions, how can we make extractors behave the same as case classes?