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I want to initialize a variable of type Int as null in Scala but I am not able to do so -

scala> val a: Int = null
<console>:11: error: an expression of type Null is ineligible for implicit conversion
   val a: Int = null

But I can initialize a variable of type String as null in Scala:

scala> val a: String = null
a: String = null

Anyone know the reason for it?

Note - I am using Scala 2.11.8

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    Not an answer to the question but it would be more normal (and better) to declarent it as an Option[Int], that way you make it clear that it may be a none, whereas nulls are always nasty suprises Mar 14, 2017 at 8:24
  • That is fine @RichardTingle, I am using Option[Int] in place of null. But, then why Scala is allowing me to do it for String type? Mar 14, 2017 at 8:28
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    See stackoverflow.com/questions/39210830/…
    – nmat
    Mar 14, 2017 at 8:30
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    Probably because java allows it (where Optional was only just introduced). Java allows a null string (because a string is an object) but no null int; because int is a primitive. I expect the scala designers didn't want to bring in a nasty feature no one should use just for consistency Mar 14, 2017 at 8:31

1 Answer 1

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Null is a subtype of all reference types; its only instance is the null reference. Since Null is not a subtype of value types, null is not a member of any such type. For instance, it is not possible to assign null to a variable of type scala.Int. In other hand String is subtype of AnyRef which allows assigning null as value. For hierarchy reference

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