1

This code works fine for me.

object MyTest extends App {

  import scala.language.implicitConversions
  import scala.language.postfixOps


  implicit class Euro(val value: Double) extends AnyVal {
    def *(factor: Double): Euro = new Euro(value * factor)

    override def toString = s"$value EURO"

    def euro : Euro = this

  }


  def runMe = {
    val e1 = 100.0.euro
    println(e1)
  }

}

But 100.0.euro is not so elegant, so I tried 100.0 euro but this causes this error

recursive value e1 needs type [error] println(e1)

I think I'm breaking precedence or something like that. I cannot figure out what I'm doing wrong. Any help is appreciated.

2
  • This works: val e1: Euro = 100.0 Don't know if it's elegant enough.
    – jwvh
    Sep 28, 2015 at 20:57
  • Thanks @jwvh, I tried that too with success. But what I really want is type inference for è1`
    – giampaolo
    Sep 28, 2015 at 21:02

2 Answers 2

4

Well that is the reason why you have to explicitly enable postfixOps

compiler is probably trying to do something like

val e1 = 100.0.euro(println(e1))

you can avoid it by disambiguing where the line ends like this:

val e1 = 100.0 euro;
println(e1)

or

val e1 = (100.0 euro)
println(e1)

also empty line seems to work

val e1 = 100.0 euro

println(e1)
1
  • You can avoid this by explicitly placing a semicolon after euro.
    – Clashsoft
    Sep 28, 2015 at 21:00
1

The compiler try to use the println as a parameter to the euro method. Adding empty line before the println should solve it.

See about suffix_notation.

1
  • The link to the style guide deserves a +1
    – giampaolo
    Sep 28, 2015 at 21:16

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