Hello: I've been learning Scala recently (my related background is mostly in C++ templates), and I've run into something I currently don't understand about Scala, and it is driving me insane. :(
(Also, this is my first post to StackOverflow, where I've noticed most of the really awesome Scala people seem to hang out, so I'm really sorry if I do something horrendously stupid with the mechanism.)
My specific confusion relates to implicit argument binding: I have come up with a specific case where the implicit argument refuses to bind, but a function with seemingly identical semantics does.
Now, it of course could be a compiler bug, but given that I just started working with Scala, the probability of me having already run into some kind of serious bug are sufficiently small that I'm expecting someone to explain what I did wrong. ;P
I have gone through the code and whittled it quite a bit in order to come up with the single example that doesn't work. Unfortunately, that example is still reasonably complex, as the problem seems to only occur in the generalization. :(
1) simplified code that does not work in the way I expected
import HList.::
trait HApplyOps {
implicit def runNil
(input :HNil)
(context :Object)
:HNil
= {
HNil()
}
implicit def runAll[Input <:HList, Output <:HList]
(input :Int::Input)
(context :Object)
(implicit run :Input=>Object=>Output)
:Int::Output
= {
HCons(0, run(input.tail)(context))
}
def runAny[Input <:HList, Output <:HList]
(input :Input)
(context :Object)
(implicit run :Input=>Object=>Output)
:Output
= {
run(input)(context)
}
}
sealed trait HList
final case class HCons[Head, Tail <:HList]
(head :Head, tail :Tail)
extends HList
{
def ::[Value](value :Value) = HCons(value, this)
}
final case class HNil()
extends HList
{
def ::[Value](value :Value) = HCons(value, this)
}
object HList extends HApplyOps {
type ::[Head, Tail <:HList] = HCons[Head, Tail]
}
class Test {
def main(args :Array[String]) {
HList.runAny( HNil())(null) // yay! ;P
HList.runAny(0::HNil())(null) // fail :(
}
}
This code, compiled with Scala 2.9.0.1, returns the following error:
broken1.scala:53: error: No implicit view available from HCons[Int,HNil] => (java.lang.Object) => Output.
HList.runAny(0::HNil())(null)
My expectation in this case is that runAll would be bound to the implicit run argument to runAny.
Now, if I modify runAll so that, instead of taking its two arguments directly, it instead returns a function that in turn takes those two arguments (a trick I thought to try as I saw it in someone else's code), it works:
2) modified code that has the same runtime behavior and actually works
implicit def runAll[Input <:HList, Output <:HList]
(implicit run :Input=>Object=>Output)
:Int::Input=>Object=>Int::Output
= {
input =>
context =>
HCons(0, run(input.tail)(context))
}
In essence, my question is: why does this work? ;( I would expect that these two functions have the same overall type signature:
1: [Input <:HList, Output <:HList] (Int::Input)(Object):Int::Output
2: [Input <:Hlist, Output <:HList] :Int::Input=>Object=>Int::Output
If it helps understand the problem, some other changes also "work" (although these change the semantics of the function, and therefore are not usable solutions):
3) hard-coding runAll for only a second level by replacing Output with HNil
implicit def runAll[Input <:HList, Output <:HList]
(input :Int::Input)
(context :Object)
(implicit run :Input=>Object=>HNil)
:Int::HNil
= {
HCons(0, run(input.tail)(context))
}
4) removing the context argument from the implicit functions
trait HApplyOps {
implicit def runNil
(input :HNil)
:HNil
= {
HNil()
}
implicit def runAll[Input <:HList, Output <:HList]
(input :Int::Input)
(implicit run :Input=>Output)
:Int::Output
= {
HCons(0, run(input.tail))
}
def runAny[Input <:HList, Output <:HList]
(input :Input)
(context :Object)
(implicit run :Input=>Output)
:Output
= {
run(input)
}
}
Any explanation anyone may have for this would be much appreciated. :(
(Currently, my best guess is that the order of the implicit argument with respect to the other arguments is the key factor that I'm missing, but one that I'm confused by: runAny has an implicit argument at the end as well, so the obvious "implicit def doesn't work well with trailing implicit" doesn't make sense to me.)
runNilandrunAllare both needed (in order to have the repeating and terminating cases:runNilworks fine, and as demonstrated by #3 hardcoding it to two levels then works); meanwhile,contextis also needed (as demonstrated by #4, where I remove it and it then works); I already simplified the HList down as much as I could (which is why I have to useHNil()instead of theHNilthat most similar code actually uses); finally, I needrunAny, as that's the function that actually takes theimplicitparameter; so no: as stated, I already tried and can't simplify it more than this :( – Jay Freeman -saurik- May 30 '11 at 8:51