3

The following outputs 0 instead of my desired result, which is 2. This looks similar to this question, but here I am using parentheses everywhere.

object Test {
  implicit def x = List(1, 2)

  trait A[T] {
    def res(): Int = 0
    def makeResPlusOne(): Int = res() + 1    // All right
  }
  trait B[T] extends A[T] {
    def res()(implicit y: List[T]) = y.size
  }
  class AA extends A[Int]
  class BB extends B[Int]
}
val x: Test.A[Int] = new Test.BB
x.res() // Outputs 0 instead of 2.

I would like the last result to be obviously 2, the size of y, but it outputs 0. If I add the keyword override to the method in B[T], it says that it overrides nothing. If I add the implicit argument to the method res in A[T] like that ...

object Test {
  implicit def x = List(1, 2)

  trait A[T] {
    def res()(implicit y: List[T]): Int = 0  // Added the implicit keyword.
    def makeResPlusOne(): Int = res() + 1    // Fails to compile.
  }
  trait B[T] extends A[T] {
    override def res()(implicit y: List[T]) = y.size
  }
  class AA extends A[Int]
  class BB extends B[Int]
}
val x: Test.A[Int] = new Test.BB
x.res() // Error

... it raises the following error:

error: could not find implicit value for parameter y: List[Int]

What am I doing wrong ? How can I get the benefits of implicit values in subclasses and still being able to overload super methods ?

EDIT

It works if I import an implicit. However, I have the method makeResPlusOne(), which triggers the error in the second case, but not in the first. Please tell me how to properly define this method, which normally does not need an implicit at compile time. _

 error: could not find implicit value for parameter y: List[T]
    def makeResPlusOne(): Int = res() + 1
                                ^

2 Answers 2

4

You were close:

object Test {
  implicit def list = List(1, 2)

  trait A[T] {
    def res()(implicit y: List[T]): Int = 0  // Added the implicit keyword.
  }
  trait B[T] extends A[T] {
    override def res()(implicit y: List[T]) = y.size
  }
  class AA extends A[Int]
  class BB extends B[Int]
}
import Test.list
val x: Test.A[Int] = new Test.BB
x.res() // Works!

You forgot to import the implicit list. Note that I have renamed the implicit to avoid conflict when importing with the variable x.

EDIT:

If you want def makeResPlusOne()(implicit y: List[T]): Int = res() + 1 you need to have an implicit List[T] in the scope, so you must add (implicit y: List[T]) as well.

object Test {
  implicit def xx = List(1, 2)

  trait A[T] {
    def res()(implicit y: List[T]): Int = 0
    def makeResPlusOne()(implicit y: List[T]): Int = res() + 1 // Works now.
  }
  trait B[T] extends A[T] {
    override def res()(implicit y: List[T]) = y.size
  }
  class AA extends A[Int]
  class BB extends B[Int]
}
import Test.xx // import the implicit list
val x: Test.A[Int] = new Test.BB
x.res() // Works
2
  • Very good. However, I have another method in the question (see the edit question) and importing the implicit does not prevent the object to fail to compile. May 15, 2013 at 14:29
  • Edited to reply to the makeResPlusOne problem. May 15, 2013 at 14:40
2

This code works fine for me (notice I changed your implicit from a def to a val):

object Test {
  implicit val xx = List(1, 2)

  trait A[T] {
    def res()(implicit y: List[T]): Int = 0  // Added the implicit keyword.
  }
  trait B[T] extends A[T] {
    override def res()(implicit y: List[T]) = y.size
  }
  class AA extends A[Int]
  class BB extends B[Int]

  val x: Test.A[Int] = new Test.BB
  x.res()  
}

Not sure if this still meets your needs with the changes though. The underlying issue really was that, as the compiler was telling you, you did not have an implicit List[Int] in scope. My example moved the x.res() call into the Test object therefore bringing it into scope, but you could also have just imported the existing implicit into scope as mentioned by @Stephane Godbillon.

3
  • It works because you moved x.res() inside Test, so the implicit xx is available. Changing def to val does not matter here. May 15, 2013 at 14:03
  • Downvoting should be reserved for answers that showed no thought or that are flat out wrong. As my answer did solve the issue by making sure that the implicit was in scope, I find it hard to believe that you considered it flat out wrong or that I did not show any thought in putting my answer together. I have edited my original response to better describe the issue anyway though.
    – cmbaxter
    May 15, 2013 at 14:14
  • Indeed, this answer provides a partial solution. However, I really need a def instead of a val, because in my real code, the list might change. Besides, I am using x.res() somewhere else out of object. Can you make a change to make it work ? May 15, 2013 at 14:19

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