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Scala DSL, Object and infix notation

in Scala, if I want to implement a DSL, is there a way to do the following:

I have an Object called "Draw" which contains the function def draw(d:Drawable)

how can I make it so that I can import the Object and call it outside the object like:

draw ball

if ball extends the Drawable trait? The problem is that I want to use draw in a kind of infix notation, but I dont want to qualify the func开发者_Python百科tion draw by denoting it's implementing class/object.


You can't do it. Aside from four prefix operators, in any operator notation the first token represents the object.


I quickly tried it out, but could quite make it work using an object. There I had to use draw(ball) instead of draw ball, as you wanted:


Welcome to Scala version 2.8.0.RC2 (Java HotSpot(TM) 64-Bit Server VM, Java 1.6.0_20).

scala> trait Drawable{def doSomething} defined trait Drawable

scala> object Draw {
def draw(d:Drawable) = d.doSomething } defined module Draw

scala> val ball = new Drawable{def doSomething = println("doing ball")} ball: java.lang.Object with Drawable = $anon$1@3a4ba4d6

scala> import Draw._ import Draw._

scala> draw ball :11: error: missing arguments for method draw in object Draw; follow this method with `_' if you want to treat it as a partially applied function draw ball ^

scala> draw(ball) doing ball

However by defining Draw as a class, it did work:


scala> trait Drawable{def doSomething: Unit}
defined trait Drawable

scala> class Draw {
def draw(d:Drawable) = d.doSomething } defined class Draw

scala>

scala> val ball = new Drawable{def doSomething = println("doing ball")} ball: java.lang.Object with Drawable = $anon$1@36a06816

scala> val d = new Draw d: Draw = Draw@7194f467

scala> d draw ball doing ball

I'm not completely sure why this doesn't work the same way with an object, might be a bug or perhaps that's specified behaviour. However I didn't have the time to look it up at the moment.

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