When you create a case class, the compiler creates a corresponding companion object with a few of the case class goodies: an apply
factory method matching the primary constructor, equals
, hashCode
, and copy
.
Somewhat oddly, this generated object extends FunctionN.
scala> case class A(a: Int)
defined class A
scala> A: (Int => A)
res0: (Int) => A = <function1>
This is only the case if:
- There is no manually defined companion object
- There is exactly one parameter list
- There are no type arguments
- The case class isn't abstract.
Seems like this was added about two years ago. The latest incarnation is here.
Does anyone use this, or know why it was added? It increases the size of the generated bytecode a little with static forwarder methods, and shows up in the #toString()
method of the companion objects:
scala> case class A()
defined class A
scala> A.toString
res12: java.lang.String = <function0>
UPDATE
Manually created objects with a single apply
method are not automatically considered as FunctionN
:
object HasApply {
def apply(a: Int) = 1
}
val i = HasApply(1)
// fails
// HasApply: (Int => Int)
question from:
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/3049368/why-do-case-class-companion-objects-extend-functionn 与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…