/** A bit down the road this test will examine * the bytecode. */ import scala.language.reflectiveCalls object Test { def len(x:{ def length: Int }) = x.length def f1(x:{ def apply(x: Int): Long }) = x(0) def f2(x:{ def apply(x: Int): Byte }) = x(0) def f3(x:{ def apply(x: Int): String }) = x(0).length def f4(x:{ def update(x: Int, y: Long): Unit }, y: Long) = x(0) = y def f5(x:{ def update(x: Int, y: Byte): Unit }, y: Byte) = x(0) = y def f6(x:{ def update(x: Int, y: String): Unit }, y: String) = x(0) = y def f7(x: { def length: Any }) = x.length def f8(x: { def apply(x: Int): Any }) = x(0) def f9(x: { def apply(x: Int): Int }) = x(0) def f10(x: { def apply(x: Int): Long }) = x(0) // update has some interesting special cases def f11(x:{ def update(x: Int, y: Long): Any }, y: Long) = x(0) = y def f12(x:{ def update(x: Int, y: String): AnyVal }, y: String) = x(0) = y def f13(x:{ def update(x: Int, y: String): AnyRef }, y: String) = x(0) = y // doesn't work yet, see #3197 // def fclone(x:{ def clone(): AnyRef }) = x.clone() def main(args: Array[String]): Unit = { val longs = Array(5L) val bytes = Array(5: Byte) val strs = Array("abcde", "fghjij") println(len(Array(1,2,3)) + len(Array(4.0,5.0f)) + len(Array("abc", 5)) + len("bop")) println(f1(longs) + f2(bytes) + f3(strs)) f4(longs, 1) f5(bytes, 1) f6(strs, "a") println(f1(longs) + f2(bytes) + f3(strs)) println(f7(Array(1,2,3))) println(f7("def")) println(f8(Array(5))) println(f9(Array(5))) println(f10(Array(5))) f11(longs, 100L) f12(strs, "jabooboo") println(longs(0)) println(strs(0)) f13(new { def update(x: Int, y: String): List[Int] = { println("hi mom") ; Nil } }, "irrelevant") } }