0

I'm a newbie, according to my lectures : class Test [T: Comparing] means that it requires an implicit value of type Comparing[T] that can be used in the methods of that class. With this Higher kinded type notation

Question : What does this expression def notation[F[_]: Sync] : F[Unit] = ??? refer to ?

2

1 Answer 1

3

Consider the difference between concrete type and type constructor

Int         // concrete type
List[Int]   // concrete type
List        // type constructor

We represent the shape of the type constructor using notation F[_]

trait Foo[T]            // Foo takes any type
trait Bar[F[_]]         // Bar takes any type constructor

new Foo[Int] {}         // ok
new Foo[List[Int]] {}   // ok
new Foo[List] {}        // error

new Bar[Int] {}         // error
new Bar[List[Int]] {}   // error 
new Bar[List] {}        // ok

We could read type parameter clause [F[_]: Bar] as meaning

  • method requires implicit value of type Bar[F] where F is a type constructor
  • type constructor F has to be a member of the typeclass Bar
trait Bar[F[_]]

// make type constructor Foo a member of typeclass Bar
implicit val barOfFoo: Bar[Foo] = new Bar[Foo] { println("woohoo") }

def g[F[_]: Bar] = implicitly[Bar[F]]

g[Foo]        // ok
g[Int]        // error - type parameter is of incorrect shape
g[Foo[Int]]   // error - type parameter is of incorrect shape
g[List]       // error - type parameter is of correct shape but not a member of Bar

Applying the above concepts to def notation[F[_]: Sync] we see that type constructor F has to be a member of typeclass Sync in order to call notation.

2
  • 1
    interesting - g[Foo[Int]] isn't caught by intellij's scala plugin (in the latest EAP version, at least).
    – mtk
    Jun 13, 2020 at 19:07
  • @mtk It seems to be a bug with editor type-aware highlighting. Metals highlights it correctly. Jun 13, 2020 at 19:17

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.