views:

691

answers:

2

In Scala 2.8 is there a way to overload constructors of a case class?

If yes, please put a snippet to explain, if not, please explain why?

+2  A: 

you can define an overloaded constructor the usual way, but to invoke it you have to use the "new" keyword.

scala> case class A(i: Int) { def this(s: String) = this(s.toInt) }
defined class A

scala> A(1)
res0: A = A(1)

scala> A("2")
<console>:8: error: type mismatch;
 found   : java.lang.String("2")
 required: Int
       A("2")
         ^

scala> new A("2")
res2: A = A(2)
Lukas Rytz
That's not strictly true - you can declare it in the companion object as normal
oxbow_lakes
+15  A: 

Overloading constructors isn't special for case classes:

case class Foo(bar: Int, baz: Int) {
  def this(bar: Int) = this(bar, 0)
}

new Foo(1, 2)
new Foo(1)

However, you may like to also overload the apply method in the companion object, which is called when you omit new.

object Foo {
  def apply(bar: Int) = new Foo(bar)
}

Foo(1, 2)
Foo(1)

In Scala 2.8, named and default parameters can often be used instead of overloading.

case class Baz(bar: Int, baz: Int = 0)
new Baz(1)
Baz(1)
retronym
Very nice :) I was looking for something like fallback values in scala, is it new from 2.8 ? I didn't know :)
Felix
Yes, Named and Default parameters are new in Scala 2.8.
retronym
Martin Odersky explains why the additional apply methods aren't added automatically: http://www.scala-lang.org/node/976
Seth Tisue