Class alias in scala
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Is it possible in Scala to define MyAlias[A] as an alias for MyClass[String, A]. For example, MyAlias[Int] would refer to Map[String, Int].

Aprylapse answered 31/5, 2012 at 8:53 Comment(0)
C
22

Note that Map is a trait, not a class.

You can still alias it using the type keyword:

type StringMap[A] = Map[String, A]

val myMap: StringMap[Int] = Map("a" -> 1)

This can be done within the scope of a class, object or trait definition (and in the scope of any method or expression).

Sometimes you'll want the alias to be private to its declaring scope, purely as a convenience for your implementation code. If you want the type to be usable generally, Package Objects come in useful:

package object mypackage {
  type StringMap[A] = Map[String, A]
}

Because Map is a trait (and associated companion object) and not a class, you won't be able to use it directly to create instances:

val myMap = new StringMap[Int]
// error: trait Map is abstract; cannot be instantiated

If you alias a class, though, you can still use the new keyword:

type StringHashMap[A] = HashMap[String, A]
val myMap = new StringHashMap[Int]
Curtsey answered 31/5, 2012 at 8:59 Comment(1)
Thanks, Map was a bad example, I meant (case) classAprylapse

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