what is going on in each of these forms of defining foo?:
scala> def foo = {1}
foo: Int
scala> foo
res2: Int = 1
But:
scala> def foo {1}
foo: Unit
scala> foo
scala>
what is going on in each of these forms of defining foo?:
scala> def foo = {1}
foo: Int
scala> foo
res2: Int = 1
But:
scala> def foo {1}
foo: Unit
scala> foo
scala>
found this in http://anyall.org/scalacheat/:
//[bad!]
def f(x: Int) { x*x } //hidden error: without = it's a Unit-returning proc; causes havoc
See also this question and answer on SO:
In Scala if a method declaration does not have an equal sign before its body, the compiler infers that the result type will be
Unit
Basically declaring a function with no =
means that the function returns Unit
and the compiler inserts a ()
for you at the end. A function which should return a non-Unit
value must be declared with the =
notation (although of course the compiler can infer the return-type from the expression's type).