I read Dependency Injection Without the Gymnastics PDF which indicates there's no need for any fancy DI framework, but it's beyond my grasp (at least without concrete examples). I'll try watching Dependency Injection Without the Gymnastics and Dead Simple Dependency Injection when I have a chance.
Using Guice in Java, if A depends on both B and C and both B and C depend on D, one would have something like:
public class A {
@Inject
public A(B b, C c) {
this.b = b;
this.c = c;
}
}
public class B {
@Inject
public B(D d) {
this.d = d;
}
}
public class C {
@Inject
public C(D d) {
this.d = d;
}
}
public class D { /* ... */ }
and a module that says which implementation of D to use, then one would just ask for an instance of A from the injector:
A a = injector.createInstance(A.class);
Given what's presented in the URLs above, how would the Scala-equivalent of the above code look?
FWIW, I'm also investigating https://github.com/dickwall/subcut/blob/master/GettingStarted.md and am simply trying to understand the anti-DI solution.