I want to use a private constructor in a macro. This example is a positive integer, but the basic pattern could not only be used for other numeric types like even numbers, but also string derived types like email addresses or a directory name. By making the constructor private the user is denied the opportunity to make an illegal type. I have the following code:
object PosInt
{
import language.experimental.macros
import reflect.runtime.universe._
import reflect.macros.Context
def op(inp: Int): Option[PosInt] = if (inp > 0) Some(new PosInt(inp)) else None
def apply(param: Int): PosInt = macro apply_impl
def apply_impl(c: Context)(param: c.Expr[Int]): c.Expr[PosInt] =
{
import c.universe._
param match {
case Expr(Literal(i)) if (i.value.asInstanceOf[Int] > 0) =>
case Expr(Literal(i)) if (i.value.asInstanceOf[Int] == 0) => c.abort(c.enclosingPosition, "0 is not a positive integer")
case Expr(Literal(i)) => c.abort(c.enclosingPosition, "is not a positive integer")
case _ => c.abort(c.enclosingPosition, "Not a Literal")
}
reify{new PosInt(param.splice)}
}
}
class PosInt (val value: Int) extends AnyVal
However if I make the PosInt Constructor private, although the Macro compiles as expected I get an error if try to use the macro. I can't work out how to build the expression tree manually, but I'm not sure if that would help anyway. Is there anyway I can do this?
You still can't use a private constructor even if PosInt is not a value class. I'll accept an answer that doesn't use a value class. The disadvantage of value classes is that they get type erasure. Plus classes that I'm interested in like subsets of 2d co-ordinates can't be implement as value classes anyway. I'm not actually interested in Positive Integers, I'm just using them as a simple test bed. I'm using Scala 2.11M5. Scala 2.11 will have the addition of the quasiquotes feature. I haven't worked out how to use, quasiquotes yet, as all the material at the moment on them seems to assume a familiarity with Macro Paradise, which I don't have.