43

If I have the following case class with a private constructor and I can not access the apply-method in the companion object.

case class Meter private (m: Int)

val m = Meter(10) // constructor Meter in class Meter cannot be accessed...

Is there a way to use a case class with a private constructor but keep the generated apply-method in the companion public?

I am aware that there is no difference (in my example) between the two options:

val m1 = new Meter(10)
val m2 = Meter(10)

but I want to forbid the first option.

-- edit --

Surprisingly the following works (but is not really what i want):

val x = Meter
val m3 = x(10) // m3  : Meter = Meter(10)
3

3 Answers 3

52

Here's the technique to have a private constructor and a public apply method.

trait Meter {
  def m: Int
}

object Meter {   
  def apply(m: Int): Meter = { MeterImpl(m) }
  private case class MeterImpl(m: Int) extends Meter { println(m) }
}

object Application extends App {
  val m1 = new Meter(10) // Forbidden
  val m2 = Meter(10)
}

Background information private-and-protected-constructor-in-scala

4
  • @senia, no it doesn't. Here's the compile error for new Meter(10){} ; trait Meter is a trait; does not take constructor arguments
    – Farmor
    Nov 17, 2013 at 13:44
  • 1
    I missed that. You should define Meter as trait Meter { def m: Int } to allow access to m. You could also make it sealed.
    – senia
    Nov 17, 2013 at 13:46
  • 2
    I think this is a good workaround because you get the asked behavior and some of the benefits from case classes (e.g. implemented equals). But it's kind of heavy compared to the single case class.
    – Erik
    Nov 17, 2013 at 13:51
  • 2
    In this case wouldn't println(Meter(1)) result in > MeterImpl(1)? Not that this doesn't answer the question, but I'd like a solution where that doesn't happen. Jun 5, 2015 at 1:44
3

It seems the requested behavior (private constructor but public .apply) may be the way Scala 2.12 implements these.

I came to this from the opposing angle - would like a private case class constructor also block the .apply method. Reasons here: https://github.com/akauppi/case-class-gym

Interesting, how use cases differ.

0

It is possible with some implicit tricks:

// first case 
case class Meter[T] private (m: T)(implicit ev: T =:= Int)
object Meter { 
  def apply(m: Int) = new Meter(m + 5) 
}

created some another constructor (and apply method signature) but guaranty that parameter can be only Int.

And after you have case class with case class features (with pattern matching, hashcode & equals) exclude default constructor:

scala> val m = Meter(10)
m: Metter[Int] = Meter(15)

scala> val m = new Meter(10)
<console>:9: error: constructor Meter in class Meter cannot be accessed in object $iw
       val m = new Meter(10)

OR with type tagging (naive implementation):

trait Private
case class Meter private (m: Integer with Private)
object Meter {
  def apply(m: Int) = new Meter((m + 5).asInstanceOf[Integer with Private])
}

It works as expected:

val x = new Meter(10)
<console>:11: error: constructor Meter in class Meter cannot be accessed in object $iw
              new Meter(10)
              ^

val x = Meter(10)
x: Meter = Meter(15)

Some possible issues with primitive types and type tags described here

0

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service, privacy policy and cookie policy

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.