6

I am a Scala newbie. I've ploughed through a couple of books, and read some online tutorials. My first project is having problems, so I have reduced the code to the simplest thing that can go wrong.

I've searched google and stack overflow for scala/constructors/varargs, and read a couple of tours of scala.

The (nearly) simplest code is:

class Foo(val params: Int*)
case class Foo1(val p: Int) extends Foo(p)
case class Foo2(val p1: Int, val p2: Int) extends Foo(p1, p2)

object Demo extends App {
  override def main(args: Array[String]) {
    val f = Foo2(1, 2)
    f.p1
  }
}

The exception occurs when accessing p1 and is

Exception in thread "main" java.lang.ClassCastException: scala.collection.mutable.WrappedArray$ofInt cannot be cast to java.lang.Integer

Resorting to debugging using eclipse, I found an interesting property: When looking at variables

f   Foo2  (id=23)   
    p2  2   
    params  WrappedArray$ofInt  (id=33) 
        array    (id=81)    
            [0] 1   
            [1] 2   

So what happened to p1?

I'm sorry for troubling you with a newbie question

3 Answers 3

6

You are not wrong but the compiler is. It tries to get p1 out of p (in your case it would try to get Foo2.p1 out of Foo.params):

def p1(): Int = scala.Int.unbox(Main$$anon$1$B.super.p());

which is obviously a bug because it can't work. Instead it should assign p1 in the ctor of the subclass.

I reported a bug: SI-7436.

2
  • Woot. My first Scala bug. OK thanks. I have a work around, but I appreciate the help. This reminded me of Fortran equivalence blocks, or Pascal variant records. Apr 30, 2013 at 12:18
  • Btw, class X(val p: Int*) doesn't make much sense. If you want to have access to p after the construction of X just use a sequence instead of varargs: class X(val p: Seq[Int]) or class X(p: Int*) { def params: Seq[Int] = p }.
    – kiritsuku
    Apr 30, 2013 at 12:22
1

I cannot explain to you /why/ Scala gets confused, but the following works:

class Foo(p: Int, ps: Int*)
case class Foo1(p1: Int) extends Foo(p1)
case class Foo2(p1: Int, p2: Int) extends Foo(p1, p2)

object Main extends App {
  println( Foo1(1) )
  println( Foo2(2, 3) )
}

Also note that, when extending App, you wouldn't want to override main.

2
  • I appreciate the comment on App. I am a newbie, so I just used the Hello World example in Eclipse. Thanks for the working code. I have something using lists that also works: my problem is one of understanding. Unfortunately I am very bothered about the "readability" of the code, and the intent of the variable params is to hold all the params. I'm wondering if this is a scala bug Apr 30, 2013 at 8:21
  • Having read your comment I think I should have mentioned that the above code also changes the semantics of your example because Foo's constructor now requires at least one argument. Probably no biggy but that depends on the problem domain :)
    – fotNelton
    Apr 30, 2013 at 9:45
0

You should have a glance at this comment and the answer just above it, I think it should answer your issue ;-)

1
  • Thanks for the response. I saw this before I posted the question, but I don't think it is the correct answer. In that question the person wanted to pass a Any* params to the constructor. I don't want to do that. In the case of Foo2 I am passing (p1,p2) to a Any*, and for some bizarre reason it is loosing access to variable p1, and replacing it with a call to get params, then having a class cast. Note that in the question the person couldn't get the code to compile. Mine compiles and runs Apr 30, 2013 at 8:45

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