What is the difference between methods ##
and hashCode
?
They seem to be outputting the same values no matter which class or hashCode
overloading I use. Google doesn't help, either, as it cannot find symbol ##
.
"Subclasses" of AnyVal
do not behave properly from a hashing perspective:
scala> 1.0.hashCode
res14: Int = 1072693248
Of course this is boxed to a call to:
scala> new java.lang.Double(1.0).hashCode
res16: Int = 1072693248
We might prefer it to be:
scala> new java.lang.Double(1.0).##
res17: Int = 1
scala> 1.0.##
res15: Int = 1
We should expect this given that the int
1 is also the double
1. Of course this issue does not arise in Java. Without it, we'd have this problem:
Set(1.0) contains 1 //compiles but is false
Luckily:
scala> Set(1.0) contains 1
res21: Boolean = true
equals
and hashCode
for a particular class, I'm not sure how this translates into the best strategy. I am assuming the hashCode
implementation should use ##
. However, should the equals
implementation use hashCode
or ##
? Here's the answer I provided on another thread which assumes that the equals
implementation should use hashCode
and the hashCode
implementation should use ##
. Evaluation and feedback on this would be greatly appreciated. stackoverflow.com/a/56509518/501113
Jun 9, 2019 at 19:14
##
was introduced because hashCode
is not consistent with the ==
operator in Scala. If a == b
then a.## == b.##
regardless of the type of a and b (if custom hashCode
implementations are correct). The same is not true for hashCode
as can be seen in the examples given by other posters.
equals
and hashCode
for a particular class, I'm not sure how this translates into the best strategy. I am assuming the hashCode
implementation should use ##
. However, should the equals
implementation use hashCode
or ##
? Here's the answer I provided on another thread which assumes that the equals
implementation should use hashCode
and the hashCode
implementation should use ##
. Evaluation and feedback on this would be greatly appreciated. stackoverflow.com/a/56509518/501113
Jun 9, 2019 at 19:15
Just want to add to the answers of other posters that although the ## method strives to keep the contract between equality and hash codes, it is apparently not good enough in some cases, like when you are comparing doubles and longs (scala 2.10.2):
> import java.lang._
import java.lang._
> val lng = Integer.MAX_VALUE.toLong + 1
lng: Long = 2147483648
> val dbl = Integer.MAX_VALUE.toDouble + 1
dbl: Double = 2.147483648E9
> lng == dbl
res65: Boolean = true
> lng.## == dbl.##
res66: Boolean = false
> (lng.##, lng.hashCode)
res67: (Int, Int) = (-2147483647,-2147483648)
> (dbl.##, dbl.hashCode)
res68: (Int, Int) = (-2147483648,1105199104)
==
and .## == .##
Dec 2, 2016 at 16:05
In addition to what everyone else said, I'd like to say that ##
is null-safe, because null.##
returns 0
whereas null.hashCode
throws NullPointerException
.
From scaladoc:
Equivalent to x.hashCode except for boxed numeric types and null. For numerics, it returns a hash value which is consistent with value equality: if two value type instances compare as true, then ## will produce the same hash value for each of them. For null returns a hashcode where null.hashCode throws a NullPointerException.
1.0 hashCode
v1.0 ##
v1 hashCode
v1 ##
— scala-lang.org/api/current/scala/Any.html1.hashCode
==
1.##
, and1.2.hashCode
==
1.2.##
. The only thing that behaves differently is1.0.hashCode
!=
1.0.##
(so##
is better suited for comparing numbers).