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I am writing my first Scala application and I am having a bit of a problem with nscala-time wrapper for joda-time library.

I have a class like this:

package domain

import org.joda.time.{Period => JodaPeriod}

case class GroundTime(val minimum: JodaPeriod, standard: JodaPeriod)

(I renamed Period class because I already have Period class in my domain)

Now, in my specs2 test I wanted to write something like:

"check standard ground time constraint" in {
  import com.github.nscala_time.time.Imports._

  val groundTime = GroundTime(minimum=10 minutes, standard=15 minutes)

but I am getting an error cannot resolve symbol minutes.

I wanted to do something like snippet that is on github page of nscala-time library:

2.hours + 45.minutes + 10.seconds
// returns com.github.nscala_time.time.DurationBuilder
// (can be used as a Duration or as a Period)
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  • Why don't you want to write val groundTime = GroundTime(minimum=10.minutes, standard=15.minutes)? Feb 19, 2014 at 12:40
  • @BobDalgleish : and what would that change in this case?
    – mikołak
    Feb 19, 2014 at 12:56

1 Answer 1

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I digged into specs2 code a little bit and I discovered that by extending Specification you also import something like TimeConversions from specs2 and there was minutes that "shadowed" minutes function from nscala-time (I am saying shadows but it was probably a problem with implicit conversions).

But also I discovered trait called NoTimeConversions from specs2 so now when I write

MySpec extends Specification with NoTimeConversions

I can write 10.minutes and it produces DurationBuilder which I wanted in the first place.

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  • 1
    You should also import scala.language.postfixOps due to Scala's feature modularization - in future versions, you will have to specifically enable postfix operators like 10 minutes, otherwise the compiler will report an error (instead of a warning). Related info here. (Readding the contents of the withdrawn answer as a comment.)
    – mikołak
    Feb 23, 2014 at 11:19

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