Why in Scala 2.12.6 does Array("1") ++ "-3"
output res1: Array[Any] = Array(1, -, 3)
?
How do I get the result Array("1", "-3")
?
The ++
operator concatenates two Lists (or other collections) together. As a String is essentially just a list of Chars, as @senjin.hajrulahovic points out the compiler treats it this way (and returns an Array[Any]
.
You can get around this in multiple ways. For example, Array("1") ++ Array("-3")
(to add two arrays together) or Array("1") :+ "-3"
to put the value on the end of the Array.
++
is binary operator
(also called method) that is used to concatenate two collections.eg. Array
s or List
s.
If the first operand is an Array
, the result defaults to Array
.
If the first operand is a List
, the result defaults to List
.
The compiler, by default, treats "-3"
as String
.
All Strings can be treated as collections also (by implicit conversions when required ). But what type of collection? Is it Array
? Is it List
? depends on its usage with the type of collection it is operated on.
For Example,
While using it as Array("1") ++ "-3"
, the String
"-3"
by default will be treated by the compiler as Array[Char]
because the first operand of ++
is an Array
( though the type of elements will be always Char
by default , by the compiler)
While using it as List("1") ++ "-3"
, the String
"-3"
by default will be treated as List[Char]
because the first operand of ++
is a List
( though the type of elements will be always Char
by default , by the compiler)
When the ++
operator encounters both operands are collections of different types of elements, their closest super-type
in type-hierarchy
, will be the type of elements of the resultant collection.
The super-type
of String
, which is the type of elements of first operand(collection) and Char
,
which is the type of elements of second operand(collection) is Any
.
So the
result of Array("1") ++ "-3"
is Array[Any]
.
If you want to add the String
"-3"
as an element to the collection, Array("1")
, then you must add it as an element to this collection. There is another method ie., :+
or +:
to append or prepend an element to the collection as below.
To append to the collection:
scala> Array("1") :+ "-3"
res6: Array[String] = Array(1, -3)
To prepend to the collection:
scala> "-3" +: Array("1")
res7: Array[String] = Array(-3, 1)
Another way of doing the above is as below(converting element to a collection and using ++
method):
scala> Array("1") ++ Array("-3")
res9: Array[String] = Array(1, -3)
scala> Array("-3") ++ Array("1")
res10: Array[String] = Array(-3, 1)
scala>
Because scala treats "-3"
as a sequence of chars '-'
and '3'
.
If you want to append the string "-3" as one element use :+
.
Finally I found the explanation here.
The following is an excerpt (verbatim) from there.
How to add (append and prepend) elements to an Array
You can’t resize a Scala
Array
, but you can use these operators (methods) to append and prepend elements to an array while assigning the result to a new variable:┌──────────────────────────┬─────────────────┬──────────────────────────────┐ │ Method │ Description │ Example │ ├──────────────────────────┼─────────────────┼──────────────────────────────┤ │ :+ │ append 1 item │ oldArray :+ e │ ├──────────────────────────┼─────────────────┼──────────────────────────────┤ │ ++ │ append N items │ oldArray ++ newArray │ ├──────────────────────────┼─────────────────┼──────────────────────────────┤ │ +: │ prepend 1 item │ e +: oldArray │ ├──────────────────────────┼─────────────────┼──────────────────────────────┤ │ ++: │ prepend N items │ newArray ++: oldArray │ └──────────────────────────┴─────────────────┴──────────────────────────────┘
Append and prepend examples
These examples show how to use those methods to append and prepend elements to an
Array
:val v1 = Array(4,5,6) // Array[Int] = Array(4, 5, 6) val v2 = v1 :+ 7 // Array(4, 5, 6, 7) val v3 = v2 ++ Array(8,9) // Array(4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9) val v4 = 3 +: v3 // Array(3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9) val v5 = Array(1,2) ++: v4 // Array(1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9)
I have a tip here that has helped me. To remember what "append" operators do what, think of :+
or +:
, which append one element to a list, as it being "the side of the operator that is the colon side - is the 'collection' side." This tells you which operand represents what and also that there is a reason to differentiate.
Array("1") ++ Array("-3")
++
method concatenates two sequences. String isn't a sequence, so Scala applies an implicit conversion, i.e. transforms it to a sequence of chars.