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187

answers:

1

Here is something I can do in java, take the results of a repeated parameter and pass it to another method:

public void foo(String ... args){bar(args);}
public void bar(String ... args){System.out.println("count="+args.length);}

In scala it would look like this:

def foo(args:String*) = bar(args)
def bar(args:String*) = println("count="+args.length)

But this won't compile, the bar signature expects a series of individual strings, and the args passed in is some non-string structure.

For now I'm just passing around arrays. It would be very nice to use starred parameters. Is there some way to do it?

+11  A: 

Java makes an assumption that you want to automatically convert the Array args to varargs, but this can be problematic with methods that accept varargs of type Object.

Scala requires that you be explicit, by ascribing the argument with : _*.

scala> def bar(args:String*) = println("count="+args.length)
bar: (args: String*)Unit

scala> def foo(args:String*) = bar(args: _*)
foo: (args: String*)Unit

scala> foo("1", "2")
count=2

You can use : _* on any subtype of Seq, or on anything implicitly convertable to a Seq, notably Array.

scala> def foo(is: Int*) = is.length
foo: (is: Int*)Int

scala> foo(1, 2, 3)
res0: Int = 3

scala> foo(Seq(1, 2, 3): _*)
res1: Int = 3

scala> foo(List(1, 2, 3): _*)
res2: Int = 3

scala> foo(Array(1, 2, 3): _*)
res3: Int = 3

scala> import collection.JavaConversions._
import collection.JavaConversions._

scala> foo(java.util.Arrays.asList(1, 2, 3): _*)
res6: Int = 3

It is explained well with examples in the Language Reference, in section 4.6.2.

Note that these examples are made with Scala 2.8.0.RC2.

retronym