1

I have a function where I want do this:

def someThing():Int = {
 val thingy:Thing = new Thing()
 try{
  thingy.getIntThingy()
 }finally{
  thingy.cleanUp()
 }
}

getIntThingy() returns an Int. There are temporary tables in thingy that are created on initialization that needs to be cleaned up (side effects). Will this code work or should I refactor?

3
  • your code is unclear. You don't return thingy, therefore the GC deletes it after leaving the method => no clean up needed.
    – kiritsuku
    Feb 4, 2012 at 22:13
  • Looks OK to me. Does it have to be in a try-catch? If not you could just store the return value in a local variable and do the cleanup before returning the Int in the final line. Feb 4, 2012 at 23:16
  • What makes you think that this code doesn't do what you want it to do? Do you have any tests? If you do, which test is failing? If you don't have tests, you can't refactor (modifying code in the absence of tests isn't refactoring, by definition). Feb 4, 2012 at 23:56

1 Answer 1

4

Well, you need to get the value from the try block, but it works. For example:

scala> val x = try { 1 } finally { println("yay") }
yay
x: Int = 1

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