I am working my way through a book on Scala Actors, and I am running into a bit of a syntactical hangup. In practice, I tend to assign my variables and function definitions as such:
val v: String = "blahblahblah"
def f(n: Int): Int = n+1
including the (return)type of the item after its name. While I know this is not necessary, I have grown comfortable with this convention and find that it makes the code more easily understood by myself. That being said, observe the below example:
class Server extends Actor {
def act() = {
while (true) {
receive {
case Message(string) => reply("Good,very good.")
}
}
}
}
def sendMsg(m: Message, s: Server): Future[String] = {
s !! m
}
The above code produces an error at compile time, complaining that the server returned a Future[Any], as opposed to a Future[String]. I understand that this problem can be circumvented by removing the return type from sendMsg:
def sendMsg(m: Message,s: Server) = s !! m
However, this is not consistant with my style. Is there a way that I can specify the type of Future that the server generates (as opposed to Future[Any])?
Akkajust call.mapTo[Int]afterask(!!isaskin your code), this will explicitly convertFuture[Any]toFuture[String]. Im sure there exists the same method for your actors/Future-s – idonnie Jan 3 at 20:40