1

I've run into a Haxe issue that seems really odd to me.. Is it a bug ?

When creating a generic class with a method taking a function of the generic type as a parameter i get the weird error

Void -> Void should be (Void) -> Void

When the generic type is Void

If the generic type is Int it works fine.

Does anyone have any ideas to fix or work around this ?

Playground link

class Test {
    static var test2:Test2<Void> = new Test2<Void>();
    static public function main() {
        test2.test(passedFunc);
    }

    static function passedFunc():Void {
        trace("passedFunc");
    }
}

class Test2<T> {
    public function new():Void {}

    public function test(func: T->Void) {
        trace("Test2.testFunc(T)");
    }
}

3 Answers 3

0

You can trick the type inference to almost ignore the missing argument like so:

class Test {
    static var test2 = new Test2();
    static public function main() {
        test2.test(passedFunc);
    }
    static function passedFunc(?unused):Void {
        trace("passedFunc");
    }
}    
class Test2<T> {
    public function new():Void {}
    public function test(func: T->Void) {
        trace("Test2.testFunc(T)");
    }
}
0

I'm not sure that it's a bug, it could just be related to the way the Type system works in Haxe. In any case, one workaround you could use is to simply have a function where the parameter is explicity typed Void->Void and use your parameterized type T in other functions of the class when necessary.

0

Workaround:

static public function main() {
    test2.test(cast passedFunc);
}

Playground link.

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