5

Here's a simplification of the classes I have:

trait RequiredThings {
  val requiredThings: Seq[String]
}

class SimpleCalculator with RequiredThings {
  val requiredThings = List("a", "b")
}

class ComplicatedCalculator extends SimpleCalculator with RequiredThings {
  self: SimpleCalculator =>
  override val requiredThings:List[String] = List("c") ::: self.requiredThings
}

In this version, I'm using a self-type annotation, but I'm not completely positive that's the way to go. I think I could probably get it to work by converting requiredThings to a method throughout, but I'd like to try it as a field.

Final solution:

trait RequiredThings {
  def requiredThings: Seq[String]
}

class SimpleCalculator with RequiredThings {
  def requiredThings = List("a", "b")
}

class ComplicatedCalculator extends SimpleCalculator with RequiredThings {
  override def requiredThings:List[String] = List("c") ::: super.requiredThings
}

3 Answers 3

7

Yes, super calls to methods "inherited" through the self-type are not yet implemented. This will change (somewhat) soon. In the meantime, you should use inheritance instead.

3
  • This is what I ended up doing. I've updated the question with the final version of my code. Mar 11, 2010 at 14:41
  • "This will change (somewhat) soon". I don't remember from the mailing-list where anyone said that this was likely to change. Could you show me where you got that info? Thanks.
    – Eric
    Mar 11, 2010 at 22:28
  • 2
    @Eric: not sure if this is was ever posted on the mailing list, but I'm on the Scala team, and Martin has ok'd (in principle) such a feature. I just got bogged down with other things in the meantime, and there are some non-trivial implementation issues.
    – lindydonna
    Mar 13, 2010 at 19:04
4

Funny enough, I stepped on the same issue yesterday.

The way self types are implemented currently, if you override a method (or value) there's no way to refer to the overridden method.

The following will loop:

class A { def foo = "a" }
trait B { self: A => override def foo = self.foo + "b" }

(note: you cannot call super.foo, the parent of B is ScalaObject, not A)

I also tried with one more indirection, but the program still loops.

class A { def foo = "a"; def fooA = A.this.foo }
trait B { this: A => override def foo = fooA + "b" }

There is work going on currently on self types, maybe this will change.

3

It makes sense to have requiredThings as a def at least in the trait - this will give you more flexibility

0

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

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