I'm trying to inject some Scala code into my existing Java app. (So, being said, I want some more fun).
I create a singleton stuff in Scala
ScalaPower.scala
package org.fun
class ScalaPower
object ScalaPower{
def showMyPower(time:Int) = {
(0 to time-1).mkString(", ")
}
}
Now, inside OldJava.java
class OldJava {
public void demo(){
System.out.println(?)
}
}
What should I fill in ?
so that Java will call the showMyPower method?
I tried both org.fun.ScalaPower.showMyPower(10)
and org.fun.ScalaPower.getInstance().showMyPower(10)
but none work.
(Decompile the class file using Jad show me nothing but nonsense code.)
Edit
I remove the class ScalaPower
declaration and scala produce the static method as expected. (call to org.fun.ScalaPower.showMyPower(10)
just works).
Wonder if it's a bug in scala compiler or not
What were the errors you were getting? Using your Scala sample and the following Java class:
cat test.java
:And running it as follows:
java -cp .:<path-to/scala/install-dir>/lib/scala-library.jar test
gives my the output:
show my power: 0, 1, 2
I think this indirectly covers it:
As found here: http://programming-scala.labs.oreilly.com/ch06.html
In short because your Object is a companion object (has a companion class) you can't call it like you expect. As you found if you get rid of the class it will work.
Keep in mind that the stock
javap
tool can be used to see what the Scala compiler produces. It doesn't directly answer your question, of course, but when what you need is just to be reminded of the code generation patterns, it's sufficient.It's usually better to access the singleton directly from its own class.
In this case:
Without going too much into the implementation details, Scala differentiates namespaces between Object and Class/Trait. This means they can use the same name. However, an object has a class, and therefore needs a mangled name on the JVM. The current Scala conventions is to add a $ at the end of the module name (for top-level modules). If the object is defined in a class, I believe the convention is OuterClass$ModuleName$. To enforce the singleton property of the ScalaPower module, there is also a static MODULE$ member of the ModuleName$ class. This is initialised at class-load time, ensuring that there is only one instance. A side effect of this is that you should not do any sort of locking in a module's constructor.
In any case, Scala also has built into it a "make things nicer for Java" static-forwarders mechanism. This is where it writes static methods on the ScalaPower class that just call ScalaPower$.MODULE$.someMethod(). If you also define a companion class, the forwarders that could be generated are limited, as you are not allowed to have naming conflicts with static and instance-level methods on the JVM. I think in 2.8.0 this means if you have a companion object, you lose your static forwarders.
In this case a "best practice" would be to always use the ScalaPower$.MODULE$ reference instead of a static forwarder, as the forwarder could disappear with modifications to the ScalaPower class.
EDIT: Typo
After doing
ScalaPower.showMyPower(10)
works as expected.