2

Isn't it supposed to call equals behind the scene?

scala> 1 equals 1l
res2: Boolean = false

scala> 1 == 1l
res3: Boolean = true
1
  • 2
    No, it is supposed to do the right thing.
    – kiritsuku
    Mar 24, 2015 at 10:54

2 Answers 2

4

From Programming in Scala 2nd Edition, chapter 11

1 The only cases where == is does not directly call equals is for Java’s boxed numeric classes such as Integer or Long . In Java, a new Integer(1) does not equal a new Long(1) even though for primitive values 1 == 1L . Since Scala is a more regular language than Java it was necessary correct this discrepancy by special-casing the == method for these classes. Likewise, the ## method provides a Scala version of hashing that is the same as Java’s hashCode , except for boxed numeric types, where it works consistently with == . For in- stance new Integer(1) and new Long(1) hash the same with ## even though their Java hashCode s are different.

2

as @MichaelLang suggests, this answer can help you, concretely:

comparing two primitives (boxed or unboxed) with == should always give the result you would have gotten by comparing those values as unboxed primitives. When you call equals directly, you are skipping all that softening logic and instead treated to java's theory that two boxed values of different types are always unequal.

If you analyze the bytecode:

1 == 1l produces

         0: aload_0       
         1: invokespecial #19                 // Method java/lang/Object."<init>":()V
         4: aload_0       
         5: putstatic     #21                 // Field MODULE$:L;
         8: aload_0       
         9: iconst_1      
        10: putfield      #17                 // Field res0:Z
        13: return        

directly compares the values of both primitive 1's, but if you examine:

1 equals 1l then

     0: aload_0       
     1: invokespecial #19                 // Method java/lang/Object."<init>":()V
     4: aload_0       
     5: putstatic     #21                 // Field MODULE$:L;
     8: aload_0       
     9: iconst_1      
    10: invokestatic  #27                 // Method scala/runtime/BoxesRunTime.boxToInteger:(I)Ljava/lang/Integer;
    13: lconst_1      
    14: invokestatic  #31                 // Method scala/runtime/BoxesRunTime.boxToLong:(J)Ljava/lang/Long;
    17: invokevirtual #35                 // Method java/lang/Object.equals:(Ljava/lang/Object;)Z
    20: putfield      #17                 // Field res0:Z
    23: return      

Where you can see that is boxing 1l primitive into a Long object and then performing the equals.

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