I'm trying to write in Kotlin something like the following Java code:
interface Provider {
}
class ProviderImpl1 implements Provider {
}
class ProviderImpl2 implements Provider {
}
enum Providers {
ONE(ProviderImpl1::new),
TWO(ProviderImpl2::new);
private final Supplier<Provider> supplier;
Providers(Supplier<Provider> supplier) {
this.supplier = supplier;
}
public Provider provider() {
return supplier.get();
}
}
This code compiles and works correctly: Providers.ONE
produces an instance of ProviderImpl1
, and Providers.TWO
gives an instance of ProviderImpl2
.
Here is what I could achieve in Kotlin:
interface Provider {
}
class ProviderImpl1 : Provider {
}
class ProviderImpl2: Provider {
}
enum class Providers(private val factory: Supplier<Provider>) {
ONE(Supplier{ ProviderImpl1() }),
TWO(Supplier{ ProviderImpl2() });
fun provider(): Provider = factory.get()
}
It works, but in Java I'm able to use a constructor reference in an enum constructor. When I try to do the same in Kotlin, namely
ONE( ::ProviderImpl1 ),
I get the following compilation error:
Type mismatch: inferred type is KFunction0 but Supplier was expected
A lambda without explicit type does not work either:
ONE( ::ProviderImpl1 )
gives
Type mismatch: inferred type is () -> ProviderImpl1 but Supplier was expected
The question is: does Kotlin specification prohibit this (and if yes, why, as Java seems to cope with it), or this is just a temporary imperfection of the current Kotlin compiler?
My build.gradle
has the following
plugins {
id 'org.jetbrains.kotlin.jvm' version '1.2.61'
}
Kotlin language version is displayed by Idea (in project settings) as 1.2.