I'm confused as how isInstanceOf
works in Scala. If I do something like this:
val x: Int = 5
x.isInstanceOf[Int]
Given that Scala does type erasure, shouldn't the JVM remove all type information during runtime?
I'm confused as how isInstanceOf
works in Scala. If I do something like this:
val x: Int = 5
x.isInstanceOf[Int]
Given that Scala does type erasure, shouldn't the JVM remove all type information during runtime?
It's not all type information, just information about generic types. Consider this:
scala> val l = List("foo")
l: List[String] = List(foo)
scala> l.isInstanceOf[List[String]]
res0: Boolean = true
scala> l.isInstanceOf[List[Int]]
<console>:9: warning: fruitless type test: a value of type List[String] cannot also be a List[Int] (the underlying of List[Int]) (but still might match its erasure)
l.isInstanceOf[List[Int]]
^
res1: Boolean = true
They both return true
, because the erased type is List
.