I have the following Scala code:
import java.util.{Comparator, function}
object ComparatorTest {
Comparator.comparing[Int, String](new function.Function[Int, String] {
override def apply(t: Int): String = t.toString
})
}
which compiles without issue. I think I should be able to replace that Function
with a lambda (that's what I understand from the doc, at least, and IntelliJ is of the same opinion). However, when I replace it with
Comparator.comparing[Int, String]((t: Int) ⇒ t.toString)
I get a compiler error:
Error:(6, 23) overloaded method value comparing with alternatives:
(x$1: java.util.function.Function[_ >: Int, _ <: String])java.util.Comparator[Int] <and>
(x$1: java.util.function.Function[_ >: Int, _ <: String],x$2: java.util.Comparator[_ >: String])java.util.Comparator[Int]
cannot be applied to (Int => String)
Comparator.comparing[Int, String]((t: Int) ⇒ t.toString)
(It looks to me like the first alternative should match.)
I've just asked a similar question, and the solution was to explicitly specify type parameters, but in this case, I think I've specified everything I could. Is there another solution to use a lambda, or is an explicit Function
needed here? If the latter, is there a doc that explains when exactly a lambda can be substituted for a SAM?