8
scala> val m = Map(1 -> 2)
m: scala.collection.immutable.Map[Int,Int] = Map(1 -> 2)

scala>  m.map{case (a, b) => (a+ 1, a+2, a+3)}
res42: scala.collection.immutable.Iterable[(Int, Int, Int)] = List((2,3,4))

What I want is for the result type to be List[(Int, Int, Int)]. The only way I found is:

scala>  m.map{case (a, b) => (a+ 1, a+2, a+3)}(breakOut[Map[_,_], (Int, Int, Int), List[(Int, Int, Int)]])
res43: List[(Int, Int, Int)] = List((2,3,4))

Is there a shorter way?

3 Answers 3

12

You can make it a bit more concise by letting the type parameters to breakOut be inferred from the return type:

scala>  m.map{case (a, b) => (a+1, a+2, a+3)}(breakOut) : List[(Int, Int, Int)]
res3: List[(Int, Int, Int)] = List((2,3,4))
6

Whilst Ben's is the correct answer, an alternative would have been to use a type alias:

type I3 = (Int, Int, Int)
m.map{case (a, b) => (a+ 1, a+2, a+3)}(breakOut[Map[_,_], I3, List[I3]])
0

Combining Ben and oxbow_lakes' answers, you can get a little shorter still:

type I3 = (Int, Int, Int)
m.map {case (a, b) ⇒ (a+1, a+2, a+3)}(breakOut): List[I3]

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.