84

I am trying to create a generic method for object updates using scala / java but I can't get the class for a type parameter.

Here is my code:

object WorkUnitController extends Controller {     
 def updateObject[T](toUpdate: T, body: JsonObject){
  val source = gson.fromJson(body, classOf[T]);
  ...
 }
}

The error i get is

class type required but T found

I know in java you can't do it but is this possible in scala at all?

Thanks!

2
  • See also: issues.scala-lang.org/browse/SI-5722
    – soc
    Aug 15, 2013 at 15:34
  • You can simply do it in Java in this way: public <T> void updateObject(T toUpdate, JsonObject body) { gson.fromJson(body, toUpdate.getClass()); }
    – MHM
    Jun 27, 2022 at 6:39

2 Answers 2

99

Due Manifest is deprecated (Since Scala 2.10.0) this is the updated answer -

import scala.reflect.ClassTag
import scala.reflect._

object WorkUnitController extends Controller {
  def updateObject[T: ClassTag](toUpdate: T, body: JsonObject){
    val source = gson.fromJson(body, classTag[T].runtimeClass)
    ???
  }
}

You should use ClassTag instead of ClassManifest and .runtimeClass instead of .erasure

Original answer - Yes, you can do that using manifests:

object WorkUnitController extends Controller {     
 def updateObject[T: ClassManifest](toUpdate: T, body: JsonObject){
  val source = gson.fromJson(body, classManifest[T].erasure);
  ...
 }
}
16
  • 1
    You can even write manifest[T] instead of implicitly[Manifest[T]]. Jun 1, 2011 at 11:31
  • 1
    @mericano1 they've become an essential part of the language, and, I think, Manifests are no longer an experimental feature Jun 1, 2011 at 11:37
  • 12
    @mericano1 One update: Manifest and ClassManifest are now deprecated, having been replaced with TypeTag and ClassTag, respectively, on Scala 2.10. Jun 15, 2012 at 13:48
  • 17
    Instead of classTag[T].runtimeClass I needed classTag[T].runtimeClass.asInstanceOf[Class[T]]. Does anybody know why? Dec 9, 2014 at 9:16
  • 1
    Would be interesting to get the answer. Basically what is the difference between Class[_] and Class[T] at run-time or compile time. Jul 3, 2017 at 17:04
10

Vasil's and Maxim's answer helped me.

Personally, I prefer the syntax where implicit is used for adding such parameters (the presented : ClassTag is shorthand for it. So here, in case someone else also sees this to be a better way:

import scala.reflect.ClassTag

object WorkUnitController extends Controller {
  def updateObject[T](toUpdate: T, body: JsonObject)(implicit tag: ClassTag[T]){
    val source = gson.fromJson(body, tag.runtimeClass)
    ???
  }
}

Demonstration: https://scastie.scala-lang.org/Vij5rpHNRDCPPG1WHo566g

0

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