Scala puts precedence on implicit conversion over "natural" operations... Why? Is this a bug? Or am
- by Alex R
This simple test, of course, works as expected:
scala var b = 2
b: Int = 2
scala b += 1
scala b
res3: Int = 3
Now I bring this into scope:
class A(var x: Int) { def +=(y:Int) { this.x += y } }
implicit def int2A(i:Int) : A = new A(i)
I'm defining a new class and a += operation on it.
I never expected this would affect the way my regular Ints behave.
But it does:
scala var b:Int = 0
b: Int = 0
scala b += 1
scala b
res29: Int = 0
scala b += 2
scala b
res31: Int = 0
Scala seems to prefer the implicit conversion over the natural += that is already defined to Ints. That leads to several questions...
Why? Is this a bug? Is it by design?
Is there a work-around (other than not using "+=")?
Thanks