18

Option is implicitly convertible to an Iterable - but why does it not just just implement Iterable directly:

def iterator = new Iterator[A] {
  var end = !isDefined
  def next() = {
    val n = if (end) throw new NoSuchElementException() else get
    end = true
    n
  }

  def hasNext = !end
}

EDIT: In fact it's even weider than that because in 2.8 Option does declare an iterator method:

def iterator: Iterator[A] = 
  if (isEmpty) Iterator.empty else Iterator.single(this.get)
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  • 1
    You could always change the source code and see what breaks. :-) Apr 9, 2010 at 12:03
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    If it's not a collection, why does it have an iterator method in 2.8? I also think that the FP mafia will be down on you for implying that somethings is either a collection or a monad. Quite clearly List and Option are both monads because they have a pure and a bind method, conceptually Apr 9, 2010 at 16:14
  • 1
    I did not say that something is either a collection or a monad. Of course, collections are monads the way they are implemented in Scala, but not every monad is also a collection. Apr 9, 2010 at 16:31
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    @Michel - apologies; I thought the "Option is a Monad, not a collection" statement implied you meant that anything which was a monad could not be a collection. Apr 9, 2010 at 16:38
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    Dual question: Why does anything implement Iterable directly? Why not just do it the way Option does it?
    – Apocalisp
    Apr 9, 2010 at 19:44

1 Answer 1

9

I'm thinking that there were too many non-nonsensical methods that would be required. For example, what would you expect the return value to be for:

Some(1) ++ Some(2)

This currently compiles and evaluates to List(1,2) via implicits in 2.8, but seems odd.

Maybe that is why the doc comments in 2.7 say:

Only potentially unbounded collections should directly sub-class Iterable

Edit: As shown in @MattR's comment below, me leaving out the doc-comment recommendation to sub-type Collection is potentially misleading. And considering it morphs this question into "Why does Option not extend the Collection trait?"

2
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    The documentation says, "If a collection has a known size, it should also sub-type Collection. Only potentially unbounded collections should directly sub-class Iterable".
    – Matt R
    Apr 10, 2010 at 8:52
  • @oxbow: I'm not sure it should! The question is then only slightly different: why should Option not subtype Collection, which is a "Variant of Iterable used to describe collections with a finite number of elements"?
    – Matt R
    Apr 10, 2010 at 13:13

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