7

Few days ago I found Paul Philip’s gist https://gist.github.com/paulp/9085746 which shows quite strange behavior. I did not find any explanation how is that possible

simplified code snippet:

val buf = new ListBuffer[Int]()
buf ++= Seq(1,2,3)
val lst: List[Int] = buf.toIterable.toList
println(lst) //List(1,2,3)
buf ++= Seq(4,5,6)
println(lst) //List(1,2,3,4,5,6)

It works as expected without toIterable

val buf = new ListBuffer[Int]()
buf ++= Seq(1,2,3)
val lst: List[Int] = buf.toList
println(lst) //List(1,2,3)
buf ++= Seq(4,5,6)
println(lst) //List(1,2,3)

What is going on there?

1 Answer 1

6

If you'll look at the List source, you'll see that cons :: class have its tail defined as private[scala] var tl not val, so it's internally mutable.

This mutation is occuring during ListBuffer append unless exported flag is set.

This flag is set in the toList method, preventing further modification of the same List

But toIterable is inherited from SeqForwarder -> IterableForwarder, which has no knowledge about such thing, but is returning same start object as it used as underlying value

2
  • @Dima I believe it is a bug
    – Odomontois
    Feb 18, 2016 at 20:38
  • It seems like it isn't really to just append: for example, buf -= 3 also mutates the lst
    – Dima
    Feb 18, 2016 at 20:39

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