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author | Martin Odersky <odersky@gmail.com> | 2004-01-19 17:03:15 +0000 |
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committer | Martin Odersky <odersky@gmail.com> | 2004-01-19 17:03:15 +0000 |
commit | 1d821aee2fc7b846da5f227cc53845492844e8bb (patch) | |
tree | 01043a58f91417678efd19a58afa3a6cbccf9d3b /doc/reference/ReferencePart.tex | |
parent | b35f58c4f2890dd68db2e559f05deb5cc87ddd29 (diff) | |
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diff --git a/doc/reference/ReferencePart.tex b/doc/reference/ReferencePart.tex new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..d6984288e9 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/reference/ReferencePart.tex @@ -0,0 +1,4579 @@ +\renewcommand{\todo}[1]{} +\newcommand{\notyet}[1]{\footnote{#1 not yet implemented.}} +\newcommand{\Ts}{\mbox{\sl Ts}} +\newcommand{\tps}{\mbox{\sl tps}} +\newcommand{\psig}{\mbox{\sl psig}} +\newcommand{\args}{\mbox{\sl args}} +\newcommand{\targs}{\mbox{\sl targs}} +\newcommand{\enums}{\mbox{\sl enums}} +\newcommand{\proto}{\mbox{\sl pt}} +\newcommand{\argtypes}{\mbox{\sl Ts}} +\newcommand{\stats}{\mbox{\sl stats}} +\newcommand{\overload}{\la\mbox{\sf and}\ra} +\newcommand{\op}{\mbox{\sl op}} + +\newcommand{\ifqualified}[1]{} +\newcommand{\iflet}[1]{} +\newcommand{\ifundefvar}[1]{} +\newcommand{\iffinaltype}[1]{} +\newcommand{\ifpackaging}[1]{} +\newcommand{\ifnewfor}[1]{} + +\chapter{Lexical Syntax} + +This chapter defines the syntax of Scala tokens. Tokens are +constructed from characters in the following character sets: +\begin{enumerate} +\item Whitespace characters. +\item Lower case letters ~\lstinline@`a' | $\ldots$ | `z'@~ and +upper case letters ~\lstinline@`A' | $\ldots$ | `Z' | `$\Dollar$' | `_'@. +\item Digits ~\lstinline@`0' | $\ldots$ | `9'@. +\item Parentheses ~\lstinline@`(' | `)' | `[' | `]' | `{' | `}'@. +\item Delimiter characters ~\lstinline@``' | `'' | `"' | `.' | `;' | `,'@. +\item Operator characters. These include all printable ASCII characters +which are in none of the sets above. +\end{enumerate} + +These sets are extended in the usual way to Unicode. + +\section{Identifiers}\label{sec:idents} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} +op ::= special {special} +varid ::= lower {letter $|$ digit} [`_' [id]] +id ::= upper {letter $|$ digit} [`_' [id]] + | varid + | op + | ```string chars`'' +\end{lstlisting} + +There are three ways to form an identifier. First, an identifier can +start with a letter which can be followed by an arbitrary sequence of +letters and digits. This may be followed by an underscore +`\lstinline@_@' character and another string of characters that by +themselves make up an identifier. Second, an identifier can be start +with a special character followed by an arbitrary sequence of special +characters. Finally, an identifier may also be formed by an arbitrary +string between backquotes (host systems may impose some restrictions +on which strings are legal for identifiers). As usual, a longest +match rule applies. For instance, the string + +\begin{lstlisting} +big_bob++=z3 +\end{lstlisting} + +decomposes into the three identifiers \lstinline@big_bob@, \lstinline@++=@, and +\code{z3}. The rules for pattern matching further distinguish between +{\em variable identifiers}, which start with a lower case letter, and +{\em constant identifiers}, which do not. + + +The `\lstinline[mathescape=false]@$@'\comment{$} character is reserved for compiler-synthesized identifiers. +User programs are not allowed to define identifiers which contain `\lstinline[mathescape=false]@$@'\comment{$} +characters. + +The following names are reserved words instead of being members of the +syntactic class \code{id} of lexical identifiers. + +\begin{lstlisting} +abstract case catch class def +do else extends false final +finally for if import new +null object override package private +protected return sealed super this +throw trait try true type +val var while with yield +_ : = => <- <: >: # @ +\end{lstlisting} + +The Unicode operator `$\Rightarrow$' has the ASCII equivalent +`$=>$', which is also reserved. + +\example +Here are examples of identifiers: +\begin{lstlisting} + x Object maxIndex p2p empty_? + + +_field +\end{lstlisting} + +\section{Braces and Semicolons} + +A semicolon `\lstinline@;@' is implicitly inserted after every closing brace +if there is a new line character between closing brace and the next +regular token after it, except if that token cannot legally start a +statement. + +The tokens which cannot legally start a statement +are the following delimiters and reserved words: +\begin{lstlisting} +catch else extends finally with yield +, . ; : = => <- <: >: # @ ) ] } +\end{lstlisting} + +\section{Literals} + +There are literals for integer numbers (of types \code{Int} and \code{Long}), +floating point numbers (of types \code{Float} and \code{Double}), characters, and +strings. The syntax of these literals is in each case as in Java. + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} +intLit ::= $\mbox{\rm\em ``as in Java''}$ +floatLit ::= $\mbox{\rm\em ``as in Java''}$ +charLit ::= $\mbox{\rm\em ``as in Java''}$ +stringLit ::= $\mbox{\rm\em ``as in Java''}$ +\end{lstlisting} + +\section{Whitespace and Comments} + +Tokens may be separated by whitespace characters (ASCII codes 0 to 32) +and/or comments. Comments come in two forms: + +A single-line comment is a sequence of characters which starts with +\lstinline@//@ and extends to the end of the line. + +A multi-line comment is a sequence of characters between \lstinline@/*@ and +\lstinline@*/@. Multi-line comments may be nested. + + +\chapter{\label{sec:names}Identifiers, Names and Scopes} + +Names in Scala identify types, values, methods, and classes which +are collectively called {\em entities}. Names are introduced by +definitions, declarations (\sref{sec:defs}) or import clauses +(\sref{sec:import}), which are collectively called {\em binders}. + +There are two different name spaces, one for types (\sref{sec:types}) +and one for terms (\sref{sec:exprs}). The same name may designate a +type and a term, depending on the context where the name is used. + +A definition or declaration has a {\em scope} in which the entity +defined by a single name can be accessed using a simple name. Scopes +are nested, and a definition or declaration in some inner scope {\em +shadows} a definition in an outer scope that contributes to the same +name space. Furthermore, a definition or declaration shadows bindings +introduced by a preceding import clause, even if the import clause is +in the same block. Import clauses, on the other hand, only shadow +bindings introduced by other import clauses in outer blocks. + +A reference to an unqualified (type- or term-) identifier $x$ is bound +by the unique binder, which +\begin{itemize} +\item defines an entity with name $x$ in the same namespace as the +identifier, and +\item shadows all other binders that define entities with name $x$ in that namespace. +\end{itemize} +It is an error if no such binder exists. If $x$ is bound by an import +clause, then the simple name $x$ is taken to be equivalent to the +qualified name to which $x$ is mapped by the import clause. If $x$ is bound by a definition or declaration, +then $x$ refers to the entity introduced by that +binder. In that case, the type of $x$ is the type of the referenced +entity. + +\example Consider the following nested definitions and imports: + +\begin{lstlisting} +object m1 { + object m2 { val x: int = 1; val y: int = 2 } + object m3 { val x: boolean = true; val y: String = "" } + val x: int = 3; + { import m2._; // shadows nothing + // reference to `x' is ambiguous here + val x: String = "abc"; // shadows preceding import + // name `x' refers to latest val definition + { import m3._ // shadows only preceding import m2 + // reference to `x' is ambiguous here + // name `y' refers to latest import clause + } + } +} +\end{lstlisting} + +A reference to a qualified (type- or term-) identifier $e.x$ refers to +the member of the type $T$ of $e$ which has the name $x$ in the same +namespace as the identifier. It is an error if $T$ is not a value type +(\sref{sec:value-types}). The type of $e.x$ is the member type of the +referenced entity in $T$. + +\chapter{\label{sec:types}Types} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + Type ::= Type1 `=>' Type + | `(' [Types] `)' `=>' Type + | Type1 + Type1 ::= SimpleType {with SimpleType} [Refinement] + SimpleType ::= StableId + | SimpleType `#' id + | Path `.' type + | SimpleType TypeArgs + | `(' Type ')' + Types ::= Type {`,' Type} +\end{lstlisting} + +We distinguish between first-order types and type constructors, which +take type parameters and yield types. A subset of first-order types +called {\em value types} represents sets of (first-class) values. +Value types are either {\em concrete} or {\em abstract}. Every +concrete value type can be represented as a {\em class type}, i.e.\ a +type designator (\sref{sec:type-desig}) that refers to a +class\footnote{We assume that objects and packages also +implicitly define a class (of the same name as the object or package, +but inaccessible to user programs).} (\sref{sec:classes}), +or as a {\em compound type} (\sref{sec:compound-types}) +consisting of class types and possibly +also a refinement (\sref{sec:refinements}) that further constrains the +types of its members. + +A shorthand exists for denoting function types +(\sref{sec:function-types}). Abstract value types are introduced by +type parameters and abstract type bindings (\sref{sec:typedcl}). +Parentheses in types are used for grouping. + +Non-value types capture properties of +identifiers that are not values +(\sref{sec:synthetic-types}). There is no syntax to express these +types directly in Scala. + +\section{Paths}\label{sec:paths}\label{sec:stable-ids} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + StableId ::= id + | Path `.' id + | [id '.'] super [`[' id `]'] `.' id + Path ::= StableId + | [id `.'] this +\end{lstlisting} + +Paths are not types themselves, but they can be a part of named types +and in that way form a central role in Scala's type system. + +A path is one of the following. +\begin{itemize} +\item +The empty path $\epsilon$ (which cannot be written explicitly in user programs). +\item +\lstinline@$C$.this@, where $C$ references a class. +The path \code{this} is taken as a shorthand for \lstinline@$C$.this@ where +$C$ is the name of the class directly enclosing the reference. +\item +\lstinline@$p$.$x$@ where $p$ is a path and $x$ is a stable member of $p$. +{\em Stable members} are members introduced by value or object +definitions, as well as packages. +\item +\lstinline@$C$.super.$x$@ or \lstinline@$C$.super[$M\,$].$x$@ +where $C$ references a class and $x$ references a +stable member of the super class or designated mixin class $M$ of $C$. +The prefix \code{super} is taken as a shorthand for \lstinline@$C$.super@ where +$C$ is the name of the class directly enclosing the reference. +\end{itemize} +A {\em stable identifier} is a path which ends in an identifier. + +\section{Value Types}\label{sec:value-types} + +\subsection{Singleton Types} +\label{sec:singleton-type} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + SimpleType ::= Path `.' type +\end{lstlisting} + +A singleton type is of the form \lstinline@$p$.type@, where $p$ is a +path. The type denotes the set of values consisting of +exactly the value denoted by $p$. + +\subsection{Type Projection} +\label{sec:type-project} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} +SimpleType ::= SimpleType `#' id +\end{lstlisting} + +A type projection \lstinline@$T$#$x$@ references the type member named +$x$ of type $T$. $T$ must be either a singleton type, +or a non-abstract class type, or a Java class type (in either of the +last two cases, it is guaranteed that $T$ has no abstract type +members). + +\subsection{Type Designators} +\label{sec:type-desig} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + SimpleType ::= StableId +\end{lstlisting} + +A type designator refers to a named value type. It can be simple or +qualified. All such type designators are shorthands for type projections. + +Specifically, the unqualified type name $t$ where $t$ is bound in some +class, object, or package $C$ is taken as a shorthand for +\lstinline@$C$.this.type#$t$@. If $t$ is not bound in a class, object, or +package, then $t$ is taken as a shorthand for +\lstinline@$\epsilon$.type#$t$@. + +A qualified type designator has the form \lstinline@$p$.$t$@ where $p$ is +a path (\sref{sec:paths}) and $t$ is a type name. Such a type designator is +equivalent to the type projection \lstinline@$p$.type#$x$@. + +\example +Some type designators and their expansions are listed below. We assume +a local type parameter $t$, a value \code{mytable} +with a type member \code{Node} and the standard class \lstinline@scala.Int@, +\begin{lstlisting} + t $\epsilon$.type#t + Int scala.type#Int + scala.Int scala.type#Int + data.maintable.Node data.maintable.type#Node +\end{lstlisting} + +\subsection{Parameterized Types} +\label{sec:param-types} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + SimpleType ::= SimpleType TypeArgs + TypeArgs ::= `[' Types `]' +\end{lstlisting} + +A parameterized type $T[U_1 \commadots U_n]$ consists of a type designator +$T$ and type parameters $U_1 \commadots U_n$ where $n \geq 1$. $T$ +must refer to a type constructor which takes $n$ type parameters $a_1 \commadots a_n$ +with lower bounds $L_1 \commadots L_n$ and upper bounds $U_1 \commadots U_n$. + +The parameterized type is well-formed if each actual type parameter +{\em conforms to its bounds}, i.e.\ $L_i\sigma <: T_i <: U_i\sigma$ where $\sigma$ +is the substitution $[a_1 := T_1 \commadots a_n := T_n]$. + +\example\label{ex:param-types} +Given the partial type definitions: + +\begin{lstlisting} + class TreeMap[a <: Ord[a], b] { $\ldots$ } + class List[a] { $\ldots$ } + class I extends Ord[I] { $\ldots$ } +\end{lstlisting} + +the following parameterized types are well formed: + +\begin{lstlisting} + TreeMap[I, String] + List[I] + List[List[Boolean]] +\end{lstlisting} + +\example Given the type definitions of \ref{ex:param-types}, +the following types are ill-formed: + +\begin{lstlisting} + TreeMap[I] // illegal: wrong number of parameters + TreeMap[List[I], Boolean] // illegal: type parameter not within bound +\end{lstlisting} + +\subsection{Compound Types} +\label{sec:compound-types} +\label{sec:refinements} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + Type ::= SimpleType {with SimpleType} [Refinement] + Refinement ::= `{' [RefineStat {`;' RefineStat}] `}' + RefineStat ::= Dcl + | type TypeDef {`,' TypeDef} + | +\end{lstlisting} + +A compound type ~\lstinline@$T_1$ with $\ldots$ with $T_n$ {$R\,$}@~ represents +objects with members as given in the component types $T_1 \commadots +T_n$ and the refinement \lstinline@{$R\,$}@. Each component type $T_i$ must be a +class type \todo{Relax for first?}. A +refinement \lstinline@{$R\,$}@ contains declarations and type +definitions. Each declaration or definition in a refinement must +override a declaration or definition in one of the component types +$T_1 \commadots T_n$. The usual rules for overriding (\sref{sec:overriding}) +apply. If no refinement is given, the empty refinement is implicitly +added, i.e. ~\lstinline@$T_1$ with $\ldots$ with $T_n$@~ is a shorthand for +~\lstinline@$T_1$ with $\ldots$ with $T_n$ {}@. + +\subsection{Function Types} +\label{sec:function-types} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + SimpleType ::= Type1 `=>' Type + | `(' [Types] `)' `=>' Type +\end{lstlisting} +The type ~\lstinline@($T_1 \commadots T_n$) => $U$@~ represents the set of function +values that take arguments of types $T_1 \commadots T_n$ and yield +results of type $U$. In the case of exactly one argument type +~\lstinline@$T$ => $U$@~ is a shorthand for ~\lstinline@($T\,$) => $U$@. Function types +associate to the right, e.g.~\lstinline@($S\,$) => ($T\,$) => $U$@~ is the same as +~\lstinline@($S\,$) => (($T\,$) => $U\,$)@. + +Function types are shorthands for class types that define \code{apply} +functions. Specifically, the $n$-ary function type +~\lstinline@($T_1 \commadots T_n$) => U@~ is a shorthand for the class type +\lstinline@Function$n$[$T_1 \commadots T_n$,$U\,$]@. Such class +types are defined in the Scala library for $n$ between 0 and 9 as follows. +\begin{lstlisting} +package scala; +trait Function$n$[-$T_1 \commadots$ -$T_n$, +$R$] { + def apply($x_1$: $T_1 \commadots x_n$: $T_n$): $R$; + override def toString() = "<function>"; +} +\end{lstlisting} +Hence, function types are covariant in their result type, and +contravariant in their argument types. + +\section{Non-Value Types} +\label{sec:synthetic-types} + +The types explained in the following do not denote sets of values, nor +do they appear explicitely in programs. They are introduced in this +report as the internal types of defined identifiers. + +\subsection{Method Types} +\label{sec:method-types} + +A method type is denoted internally as $(\Ts)U$, where $(\Ts)$ is a +sequence of types $(T_1 \commadots T_n)$ for some $n \geq 0$ +and $U$ is a (value or method) type. This type represents named +methods that take arguments of types $T_1 \commadots T_n$ +and that return a result of type $U$. + +Method types associate to the right: $(\Ts_1)(\Ts_2)U$ is treated as +$(\Ts_1)((\Ts_2)U)$. + +A special case are types of methods without any parameters. They are +written here $[]T$, following the syntax for polymorphic method types +(\sref{sec:poly-types}). Parameterless methods name expressions that +are re-evaluated each time the parameterless method name is +referenced. + +Method types do not exist as types of values. If a method name is used +as a value, its type is implicitly converted to a corresponding +function type (\sref{sec:impl-conv}). + +\example The declarations +\begin{lstlisting} +def a: Int +def b (x: Int): Boolean +def c (x: Int) (y: String, z: String): String +\end{lstlisting} +produce the typings +\begin{lstlisting} +a: [] Int +b: (Int) Boolean +c: (Int) (String, String) String +\end{lstlisting} + +\subsection{Polymorphic Method Types} +\label{sec:poly-types} + +A polymorphic method type is denoted internally as ~\lstinline@[$\tps\,$]$T$@~ where +\lstinline@[$\tps\,$]@ is a type parameter section +~\lstinline@[$a_1$ <: $L_1$ >: $U_1 \commadots a_n$ <: $L_n$ >: $U_n$]@~ +for some $n \geq 0$ and $T$ is a +(value or method) type. This type represents named methods that +take type arguments ~\lstinline@$S_1 \commadots S_n$@~ which +conform (\sref{sec:param-types}) to the lower bounds +~\lstinline@$S_1 \commadots S_n$@~ and the upper bounds +~\lstinline@$U_1 \commadots U_n$@~ and that yield results of type $T$. + +\example The declarations +\begin{lstlisting} +def empty[a]: List[a] +def union[a <: Comparable[a]] (x: Set[a], xs: Set[a]): Set[a] +\end{lstlisting} +produce the typings +\begin{lstlisting} +empty : [a >: All <: Any] List[a] +union : [a >: All <: Comparable[a]] (x: Set[a], xs: Set[a]) Set[a] . +\end{lstlisting} + +\comment{ +\subsection{Overloaded Types} +\label{sec:overloaded-types} + +More than one values or methods are defined in the same scope with the +same name, we model + +An overloaded type consisting of type alternatives $T_1 \commadots +T_n (n \geq 2)$ is denoted internally $T_1 \overload \ldots \overload T_n$. + +\example The definitions +\begin{lstlisting} +def println: unit; +def println(s: string): unit = $\ldots$; +def println(x: float): unit = $\ldots$; +def println(x: float, width: int): unit = $\ldots$; +def println[a](x: a)(tostring: a => String): unit = $\ldots$ +\end{lstlisting} +define a single function \code{println} which has an overloaded +type. +\begin{lstlisting} +println: [] unit $\overload$ + (String) unit $\overload$ + (float) unit $\overload$ + (float, int) unit $\overload$ + [a] (a) (a => String) unit +\end{lstlisting} + +\example The definitions +\begin{lstlisting} +def f(x: T): T = $\ldots$; +val f = 0 +\end{lstlisting} +define a function \code{f} which has type ~\lstinline@(x: T)T $\overload$ Int@. +} + +\section{Base Classes and Member Definitions} +\label{sec:base-classes-member-defs} + +Types, bounds and base classes of class members depend on the way the +members are referenced. Central here are three notions, namely: +\begin{enumerate} +\item the notion of the set of base classes of a type $T$, +\item the notion of a type $T$ in some class $C$ seem from some + prefix type $S$, +\item the notion of a member binding of some type $T$. +\end{enumerate} +These notions are defined mutually recursively as follows. + +1. The set of {\em base classes} of a type is a set of class types, +given as follows. +\begin{itemize} +\item +The base classes of a class type $C$ are the base classes of class +$C$. +\item +The base classes of an aliased type are the base classes of its alias. +\item +The base classes of an abstract type are the base classes of its upper bound. +\item +The base classes of a parameterized type +~\lstinline@$C$[$T_1 \commadots T_n$]@~ are the base classes +of type $C$, where every occurrence of a type parameter $a_i$ +of $C$ has been replaced by the corresponding parameter type $T_i$. +\item +The base classes of a singleton type \lstinline@$p$.type@ are the base classes of +the type of $p$. +\item +The base classes of a compound type +~\lstinline@$T_1$ with $\ldots$ with $T_n$ {$R\,$}@~ +are the {\em reduced union} of the base +classes of all $T_i$'s. This means: +Let the multi-set $\SS$ be the multi-set-union of the +base classes of all $T_i$'s. +If $\SS$ contains several type instances of the same class, say +~\lstinline@$S^i$#$C$[$T^i_1 \commadots T^i_n$]@~ $(i \in I)$, then +all those instances +are replaced by one of them which conforms to all +others. It is an error if no such instance exists, or if $C$ is not a trait +(\sref{sec:traits}). It follows that the reduced union, if it exists, +produces a set of class types, where different types are instances of different classes. +\item +The base classes of a type selection \lstinline@$S$#$T$@ are +determined as follows. If $T$ is an alias or abstract type, the +previous clauses apply. Otherwise, $T$ must be a (possibly +parameterized) class type, which is defined in some class $B$. Then +the base classes of \lstinline@$S$#$T$@ are the base classes of $T$ +in $B$ seen from the prefix type $S$. +\end{itemize} + +2. The notion of a type $T$ +{\em in class $C$ seen from some prefix type +$S\,$} makes sense only if the prefix type $S$ +has a type instance of class $C$ as a base class, say +~\lstinline@$S'$#$C$[$T_1 \commadots T_n$]@. Then we define as follows. +\begin{itemize} + \item + If \lstinline@$S$ = $\epsilon$.type@, then $T$ in $C$ seen from $S$ is $T$ itself. + \item Otherwise, if $T$ is the $i$'th type parameter of some class $D$, then + \begin{itemize} + \item + If $S$ has a base class ~\lstinline@$D$[$U_1 \commadots U_n$]@, for some type parameters + ~\lstinline@[$U_1 \commadots U_n$]@, then $T$ in $C$ seen from $S$ is $U_i$. + \item + Otherwise, if $C$ is defined in a class $C'$, then + $T$ in $C$ seen from $S$ is the same as $T$ in $C'$ seen from $S'$. + \item + Otherwise, if $C$ is not defined in another class, then + $T$ in $C$ seen from $S$ is $T$ itself. + \end{itemize} +\item + Otherwise, + if $T$ is the singleton type \lstinline@$D$.this.type@ for some class $D$ + then + \begin{itemize} + \item + If $D$ is a subclass of $C$ and + $S$ has a type instance of class $D$ among its base classes. + then $T$ in $C$ seen from $S$ is $S$. + \item + Otherwise, if $C$ is defined in a class $C'$, then + $T$ in $C$ seen from $S$ is the same as $T$ in $C'$ seen from $S'$. + \item + Otherwise, if $C$ is not defined in another class, then + $T$ in $C$ seen from $S$ is $T$ itself. + \end{itemize} +\item + If $T$ is some other type, then the described mapping is performed + to all its type components. +\end{itemize} + +If $T$ is a possibly parameterized class type, where $T$'s class +is defined in some other class $D$, and $S$ is some prefix type, +then we use ``$T$ seen from $S$'' as a shorthand for +``$T$ in $D$ seen from $S$. + +3. The {\em member bindings} of a type $T$ are all bindings $d$ such that +there exists a type instance of some class $C$ among the base classes of $T$ +and there exists a definition or declaration $d'$ in $C$ +such that $d$ results from $d'$ by replacing every +type $T'$ in $d'$ by $T'$ in $C$ seen from $T$. + +The {\em definition} of a type projection \lstinline@$S$#$t$@ is the member +binding $d$ of the type $t$ in $S$. In that case, we also say +that \lstinline@$S$#$t$@ {\em is defined by} $d$. + +\section{Relations between types} + +We define two relations between types. +\begin{quote}\begin{tabular}{l@{\gap}l@{\gap}l} +\em Type equivalence & $T \equiv U$ & $T$ and $U$ are interchangeable +in all contexts. +\\ +\em Conformance & $T \conforms U$ & Type $T$ conforms to type $U$. +\end{tabular}\end{quote} + +\subsection{Type Equivalence} +\label{sec:type-equiv} + +Equivalence $(\equiv)$ between types is the smallest congruence\footnote{ A +congruence is an equivalence relation which is closed under formation +of contexts} such that the following holds: +\begin{itemize} +\item +If $t$ is defined by a type alias ~\lstinline@type $t$ = $T$@, then $t$ is +equivalent to $T$. +\item +If a path $p$ has a singleton type ~\lstinline@$q$.type@, then +~\lstinline@$p$.type $\equiv q$.type@. +\item +If $O$ is defined by an object definition, and $p$ is a path +consisting only of package or object selectors and ending in $O$, then +~\lstinline@$O$.this.type $\equiv p$.type@. +\item +Two compound types are equivalent if their component types are +pairwise equivalent and their refinements are equivalent. Two +refinements are equivalent if they bind the same names and the +modifiers, types and bounds of every declared entity are equivalent in +both refinements. +\item +Two method types are equivalent if they have equivalent result +types, both have the same number of parameters, and corresponding +parameters have equivalent types as well as the same \code{def} or +\lstinline@*@ modifiers. Note that the names of parameters do not matter +for method type equivalence. +\item +Two polymorphic types are equivalent if they have the same number of +type parameters, and, after renaming one set of type parameters by +another, the result types as well as lower and upper bounds of +corresponding type parameters are equivalent. +\item +Two overloaded types are equivalent if for every alternative type in +either type there exists an equivalent alternative type in the other. +\end{itemize} + +\subsection{Conformance} +\label{sec:subtyping} + +The conformance relation $(\conforms)$ is the smallest +transitive relation that satisfies the following conditions. +\begin{itemize} +\item Conformance includes equivalence. If $T \equiv U$ then $T \conforms U$. +\item For every value type $T$, + $\mbox{\code{scala.All}} \conforms T \conforms \mbox{\code{scala.Any}}$. +\item For every value type $T \conforms \mbox{\code{scala.AnyRef}}$ + one has $\mbox{\code{scala.AllRef}} \conforms T$. +\item A type variable or abstract type $t$ conforms to its upper bound and + its lower bound conforms to $t$. +\item A class type or parameterized type $c$ conforms to any of its basetypes, $b$. +\item A type projection \lstinline@$T$#$t$@ conforms to \lstinline@$U$#$t$@ if + $T$ conforms to $U$. +\item A parameterized type ~\lstinline@$T$[$T_1 \commadots T_n$]@~ conforms to + ~\lstinline@$T$[$U_1 \commadots U_n$]@~ if + the following three conditions hold for $i = 1 \commadots n$. + \begin{itemize} + \item + If the $i$'th type parameter of $T$ is declared covariant, then $T_i \conforms U_i$. + \item + If the $i$'th type parameter of $T$ is declared contravariant, then $U_i \conforms T_i$. + \item + If the $i$'th type parameter of $T$ is declared neither covariant + nor contravariant, then $U_i \equiv T_i$. + \end{itemize} +\item A compound type ~\lstinline@$T_1$ with $\ldots$ with $T_n$ {$R\,$}@~ conforms to + each of its component types $T_i$. +\item If $T \conforms U_i$ for $i = 1 \commadots n$ and for every + binding of a type or value $x$ in $R$ there exists a member + binding of $x$ in $T$ subsuming it, then $T$ conforms to the + compound type ~\lstinline@$T_1$ with $\ldots$ with $T_n$ {$R\,$}@. +\item If + $T'_i$ conforms to $T_i$ for $i = 1 \commadots n$ and $U$ conforms to $U'$ + then the method type $(T_1 \commadots T_n) U$ conforms to + $(T'_1 \commadots T'_n) U'$. +\item If, assuming +$L'_1 \conforms a_1 \conforms U'_1 \commadots L'_n \conforms a_n \conforms U'_n$ +one has $L_i \conforms L'_i$ and $U'_i \conforms U_i$ +for $i = 1 \commadots n$, as well as $T \conforms T'$ then the polymorphic type +$[a_1 >: L_1 <: U_1 \commadots a_n >: L_n <: U_n] T$ conforms to the polymorphic type +$[a_1 >: L'_1 <: U'_1 \commadots a_n >: L'_n <: U'_n] T'$. +\item +An overloaded type $T_1 \overload \ldots \overload T_n$ conforms to each of its alternative types $T_i$. +\item +A type $S$ conforms to the overloaded type $T_1 \overload \ldots \overload T_n$ +if $S$ conforms to each alternative type $T_i$. \todo{Really?} +\end{itemize} + +A declaration or definition in some compound type of class type $C$ +is {\em subsumes} another +declaration of the same name in some compound type or class type $C'$, if one of the following holds. +\begin{itemize} +\item +A value declaration ~\lstinline@val $x$: $T$@~ or value definition +~\lstinline@val $x$: $T$ = $e$@~ subsumes a value declaration +~\lstinline@val $x$: $T'$@~ if $T \conforms T'$. +\item +A type alias +$\TYPE;t=T$ subsumes a type alias $\TYPE;t=T'$ if +$T \equiv T'$. +\item +A type declaration ~\lstinline@type $t$ >: $L$ <: $U$@~ subsumes +a type declaration ~\lstinline@type $t$ >: $L'$ <: $U'$@~ if $L' \conforms L$ and +$U \conforms U'$. +\item +A type or class definition of some type $t$ subsumes an abstract +type declaration ~\lstinline@type t >: L <: U@~ if +$L \conforms t \conforms U$. +\end{itemize} + +The $(\conforms)$ relation forms a partial order between types. The {\em +least upper bound} or the {\em greatest lower bound} of a set of types +is understood to be relative to that order. + +\paragraph{Note} The least upper bound of a set of types does not always exist. For instance, consider +the class definitions +\begin{lstlisting} +class A[+t] {} +class B extends A[B]; +class C extends A[C]; +\end{lstlisting} +Then the types ~\lstinline@A[Any], A[A[Any]], A[A[A[Any]]], ...@~ form +a descending sequence of upper bounds for \code{B} and \code{C}. The +least upper bound would be the infinite limit of that sequence, which +does ot exist as a Scala type. Since cases like this are in general +impossible to detect, a Scala compiler is free to reject a term +which has a type specified as a least upper or greatest lower bound, +and that bound would be more complex than some compiler-set +limit\footnote{The current Scala compiler limits the nesting level +of parameterization in a such bounds to 10.}. + +\section{Type Erasure} +\label{sec:erasure} + +A type is called {\em generic} if it contains type arguments or type variables. +{\em Type erasure} is a mapping from (possibly generic) types to +non-generic types. We write $|T|$ for the erasure of type $T$. +The erasure mapping is defined as follows. +\begin{itemize} +\item The erasure of a type variable is the erasure of its upper bound. +\item The erasure of a parameterized type $T[T_1 \commadots T_n]$ is $|T|$. +\item The erasure of a singleton type \lstinline@$p$.type@ is the + erasure of the type of $p$. +\item The erasure of a type projection \lstinline@$T$#$x$@ is \lstinline@|$T$|#$x$@. +\item The erasure of a compound type ~\lstinline@$T_1$ with $\ldots$ with $T_n$ {$R\,$}@ + is $|T_1|$. +\item The erasure of every other type is the type itself. +\end{itemize} + +\section{Implicit Conversions} +\label{sec:impl-conv} + +\todo{Include Anything to unit?} + +The following implicit conversions are applied to expressions of +method type that are used as values, rather than being applied to some +arguments. +\begin{itemize} +\item +A parameterless method $m$ of type $[] T$ +is converted to type $T$ by evaluating the expression to which $m$ is bound. +\item +An expression $e$ of polymorphic type +\begin{lstlisting} +[$a_1$ >: $L_1$ <: $U_1 \commadots a_n$ >: $L_n$ <: $U_n$]$T$ +\end{lstlisting} +which does not appear as the function part of +a type application is converted to type $T$ +by determining with local type inference +(\sref{sec:local-type-inf}) instance types ~\lstinline@$T_1 \commadots T_n$@~ +for the type variables ~\lstinline@$a_1 \commadots a_n$@~ and +implicitly embedding $e$ in the type application +~\lstinline@$e$[$U_1 \commadots U_n$]@~ (\sref{sec:type-app}). +\item +An expression $e$ of monomorphic method type +$(\Ts_1) \ldots (\Ts_n) U$ of arity $n > 0$ +which does not appear as the function part of an application is +converted to a function type by implicitly embedding $e$ in +the following term, where $x$ is a fresh variable and each $ps_i$ is a +parameter section consisting of parameters with fresh names of types $\Ts_i$: +\begin{lstlisting} +(val $x$ = $e$ ; $(ps_1) \ldots \Arrow \ldots \Arrow (ps_n) \Arrow x(ps_1)\ldots(ps_n)$) +\end{lstlisting} +This conversion is not applicable to functions with call-by-name +parameters \lstinline@def $x$: $T$@ or repeated parameters +\lstinline@x: T*@, (\sref{sec:parameters}), because its result would +violate the well-formedness rules for anonymous functions +(\sref{sec:closures}). Hence, methods with such parameters +always need to be applied to arguments immediately. +\end{itemize} + +When used in an expression, a value of type \code{byte}, \code{char}, +or \code{short} is always implicitly converted to a value of type +\code{int}. + +If an expression $e$ has type $T$ where $T$ does not conform to the +expected type $pt$ and $T$ has a member named \lstinline@coerce@ of type +$[]U$ where $U$ does comform to $pt$, then the expression is typed and evaluated is if it was +\lstinline@$e$.coerce@. + + +\chapter{Basic Declarations and Definitions} +\label{sec:defs} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + Dcl ::= val ValDcl {`,' ValDcl} + | var VarDcl {`,' VarDcl} + | def FunDcl {`,' FunDcl} + | type TypeDcl {`,' TypeDcl} + Def ::= val PatDef {`,' PatDef} + | var VarDef {`,' VarDef} + | def FunDef {`,' FunDef} + | type TypeDef {`,' TypeDef} + | ClsDef +\end{lstlisting} + +A {\em declaration} introduces names and assigns them types. It can +appear as one of the statements of a class definition +(\sref{sec:templates}) or as part of a refinement in a compound +type (\ref{sec:refinements}). + +A {\em definition} introduces names that denote terms or types. It can +form part of an object or class definition or it can be local to a +block. Both declarations and definitions produce {\em bindings} that +associate type names with type definitions or bounds, and that +associate term names with types. + +The scope of a name introduced by a declaration or definition is the +whole statement sequence containing the binding. However, there is a +restriction on forward references: In a statement sequence $s_1 \ldots +s_n$, if a simple name in $s_i$ refers to an entity defined by $s_j$ +where $j \geq i$, then every non-empty statement between and including +$s_i$ and $s_j$ must be an import clause, +or a function, type, class, or object definition. It may not be +a value definition, a variable defninition, or an expression. + +\comment{ +Every basic definition may introduce several defined names, separated +by commas. These are expanded according to the following scheme: +\bda{lcl} +\VAL;x, y: T = e && \VAL; x: T = e \\ + && \VAL; y: T = x \\[0.5em] + +\LET;x, y: T = e && \LET; x: T = e \\ + && \VAL; y: T = x \\[0.5em] + +\DEF;x, y (ps): T = e &\tab\mbox{expands to}\tab& \DEF; x(ps): T = e \\ + && \DEF; y(ps): T = x(ps)\\[0.5em] + +\VAR;x, y: T := e && \VAR;x: T := e\\ + && \VAR;y: T := x\\[0.5em] + +\TYPE;t,u = T && \TYPE; t = T\\ + && \TYPE; u = t\\[0.5em] +\eda +} + +All definitions have a ``repeated form'' where the initial +definition keyword is followed by several constituent definitions +which are separated by commas. A repeated definition is +always interpreted as a sequence formed from the +constituent definitions. E.g.\ the function definition +~\lstinline@def f(x) = x, g(y) = y@~ expands to +~\lstinline@def f(x) = x; def g(y) = y@~ and +the type definition +~\lstinline@type T, U <: B@~ expands to +~\lstinline@type T; type U <: B@. + +\comment{ +If an element in such a sequence introduces only the defined name, +possibly with some type or value parameters, but leaves out any +aditional parts in the definition, then those parts are implicitly +copied from the next subsequent sequence element which consists of +more than just a defined name and parameters. Examples: +\begin{itemize} +\item[] +The variable declaration ~\lstinline@var x, y: int@~ +expands to ~\lstinline@var x: int; var y: int@. +\item[] +The value definition ~\lstinline@val x, y: int = 1@~ +expands to ~\lstinline@val x: int = 1; val y: int = 1@. +\item[] +The class definition ~\lstinline@case class X(), Y(n: int) extends Z@~ expands to +~\lstinline@case class X extends Z; case class Y(n: int) extends Z@. +\item +The object definition ~\lstinline@case object Red, Green, Blue extends Color@~ +expands to +\begin{lstlisting} +case object Red extends Color; +case object Green extends Color; +case object Blue extends Color . +\end{lstlisting} +\end{itemize} +} +\section{Value Declarations and Definitions} +\label{sec:valdef} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + Dcl ::= val ValDcl {`,' ValDcl} + ValDcl ::= id `:' Type + Def ::= val PatDef {`,' PatDef} + PatDef ::= Pattern2 [`:' Type] `=' Expr +\end{lstlisting} + +A value declaration ~\lstinline@val $x$: $T$@~ introduces $x$ as a name of a value of +type $T$. + +A value definition ~\lstinline@val $x$: $T$ = $e$@~ defines $x$ as a name of the +value that results from the evaluation of $e$. The type $T$ may be +omitted, in which case the type of expression $e$ is assumed. +If a type $T$ is given, then $e$ is expected to conform to it. + +Evaluation of the value definition implies evaluation of its +right-hand side $e$. The effect of the value definition is to bind +$x$ to the value of $e$ converted to type $T$. + +Value definitions can alternatively have a pattern +(\sref{sec:patterns}) as left-hand side. If $p$ is some pattern other +than a simple name or a name followed by a colon and a type, then the +value definition ~\lstinline@val $p$ = $e$@~ is expanded as follows: + +1. If the pattern $p$ has bound variables $x_1 \commadots x_n$, where $n > 1$: +\begin{lstlisting} +val $\Dollar x$ = $e$.match {case $p$ => scala.Tuple$n$($x_1 \commadots x_n$)} +val $x_1$ = $\Dollar x$._1 +$\ldots$ +val $x_n$ = $\Dollar x$._n . +\end{lstlisting} +Here, $\Dollar x$ is a fresh name. The class +\lstinline@Tuple$n$@ is defined for $n = 2 \commadots 9$ in package +\code{scala}. + +2. If $p$ has a unique bound variable $x$: +\begin{lstlisting} +val $x$ = $e$.match { case $p$ => $x$ } +\end{lstlisting} + +3. If $p$ has no bound variables: +\begin{lstlisting} +$e$.match { case $p$ => ()} +\end{lstlisting} + +\example +The following are examples of value definitions +\begin{lstlisting} +val pi = 3.1415; +val pi: double = 3.1415; // equivalent to first definition +val Some(x) = f(); // a pattern definition +val x :: xs = mylist; // an infix pattern definition +\end{lstlisting} + +The last two definitions have the following expansions. +\begin{lstlisting} +val x = f().match { case Some(x) => x } + +val x$\Dollar$ = mylist.match { case x :: xs => scala.Tuple2(x, xs) } +val x = x$\Dollar$._1; +val xs = x$\Dollar$._2; +\end{lstlisting} + +\section{Variable Declarations and Definitions} +\label{sec:vardef} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + Dcl ::= var VarDcl {`,' VarDcl} + Def ::= var ValDef {`,' ValDef} + VarDcl ::= id `:' Type + VarDef ::= id [`:' Type] `=' Expr + | id `:' Type `=' `_' +\end{lstlisting} + +A variable declaration ~\lstinline@var $x$: $T$@~ is equivalent to declarations +of a {\em getter function} $x$ and a {\em setter function} +\lstinline@$x$_=@, defined as follows: + +\begin{lstlisting} + def $x$: $T$; + def $x$_= ($y$: $T$): unit +\end{lstlisting} + +An implementation of a class containing variable declarations +may define these variables using variable definitions, or it may +define setter and getter functions directly. + +A variable definition ~\lstinline@var $x$: $T$ = $e$@~ introduces a mutable +variable with type $T$ and initial value as given by the +expression $e$. The type $T$ can be omitted, +in which case the type of $e$ is assumed. If $T$ is given, then $e$ +is expected to conform to it. + +A variable definition ~\lstinline@var $x$: $T$ = _@~ introduces a mutable +variable with type \ $T$ and a default initial value. +The default value depends on the type $T$ as follows: +\begin{quote}\begin{tabular}{ll} +\code{0} & if $T$ is \code{int} or one of its subrange types, \\ +\code{0L} & if $T$ is \code{long},\\ +\lstinline@0.0f@ & if $T$ is \code{float},\\ +\lstinline@0.0d@ & if $T$ is \code{double},\\ +\code{false} & if $T$ is \code{boolean},\\ +\lstinline@()@ & if $T$ is \code{unit}, \\ +\code{null} & for all other types $T$. +\end{tabular}\end{quote} + +When they occur as members of a template, both forms of variable +definition also introduce a getter function $x$ which returns the +value currently assigned to the variable, as well as a setter function +\lstinline@$x$_=@ which changes the value currently assigned to the variable. +The functions have the same signatures as for a variable declaration. +The getter and setter functions are then members of the template +instead of the variable accessed by them. + +\example The following example shows how {\em properties} can be +simulated in Scala. It defines a class \code{TimeOfDayVar} of time +values with updatable integer fields representing hours, minutes, and +seconds. Its implementation contains tests that allow only legal +values to be assigned to these fields. The user code, on the other +hand, accesses these fields just like normal variables. + +\begin{lstlisting} +class TimeOfDayVar { + private var h: int = 0, m: int = 0, s: int = 0; + + def hours = h; + def hours_= (h: int) = if (0 <= h && h < 24) this.h = h + else throw new DateError(); + + def minutes = m + def minutes_= (m: int) = if (0 <= m && m < 60) this.m = m + else throw new DateError(); + + def seconds = s + def seconds_= (s: int) = if (0 <= s && s < 60) this.s = s + else throw new DateError(); +} +val t = new TimeOfDayVar; +d.hours = 8; d.minutes = 30; d.seconds = 0; +d.hours = 25; // throws a DateError exception +\end{lstlisting} + +\section{Type Declarations and Type Aliases} +\label{sec:typedcl} +\label{sec:typealias} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + Dcl ::= type TypeDcl {`,' TypeDcl} + TypeDcl ::= id [>: Type] [<: Type] + Def ::= type TypeDef {`,' TypeDef} + TypeDef ::= id [TypeParamClause] `=' Type +\end{lstlisting} + +A {\em type declaration} ~\lstinline@type $t$ >: $L$ <: $U$@~ declares $t$ to +be an abstract type with lower bound type $L$ and upper bound +type $U$. If such a declaration appears as a member declaration +of a type, implementations of the type may implement $t$ with any +type $T$ for which $L \conforms T \conforms U$. Either or both bounds may +be omitted. If the lower bound $L$ is missing, the bottom type +\lstinline@scala.All@ is assumed. If the upper bound $U$ is missing, +the top type \lstinline@scala.Any@ is assumed. + +A {\em type alias} ~\lstinline@type $t$ = $T$@~ defines $t$ to be an alias +name for the type $T$. The left hand side of a type alias may +have a type parameter clause, e.g. ~\lstinline@type $t$[$\tps\,$] = $T$@. The scope +of a type parameter extends over the right hand side $T$ and the +type parameter clause $\tps$ itself. + +The scope rules for definitions (\sref{sec:defs}) and type parameters +(\sref{sec:funsigs}) make it possible that a type name appears in its +own bound or in its right-hand side. However, it is a static error if +a type alias refers recursively to the defined type constructor itself. +That is, the type $T$ in a type alias ~\lstinline@type $t$[$\tps\,$] = $T$@~ may not refer +directly or indirectly to the name $t$. It is also an error if +an abstract type is directly or indirectly its own upper or lower bound. + +\example The following are legal type declarations and definitions: +\begin{lstlisting} +type IntList = List[Integer]; +type T <: Comparable[T]; +type Two[a] = Tuple2[a, a]; +\end{lstlisting} + +The following are illegal: +\begin{lstlisting} +type Abs = Comparable[Abs]; // recursive type alias + +type S <: T; // S, T are bounded by themselves. +type T <: S; + +type T <: AnyRef with T; // T is abstract, may not be part of + // compound type + +type T >: Comparable[T.That]; // Cannot select from T. + // T is a type, not a value +\end{lstlisting} + +If a type alias ~\lstinline@type $t$[$\tps\,$] = $S$@~ refers to a class type +$S$, the name $t$ can also be used as a constructor for +objects of type $S$. + +\example The \code{Predef} module contains a definition which establishes \code{Pair} +as an alias of the parameterized class \code{Tuple2}: +\begin{lstlisting} +type Pair[+a, +b] = Tuple2[a, b]; +\end{lstlisting} +As a consequence, for any two types $S$ and $T$, the type +~\lstinline@Pair[$S$, $T\,$]@~ is equivalent to the type ~\lstinline@Tuple2[$S$, $T\,$]@. +\code{Pair} can also be used as a constructor instead of \code{Tuple2}, as in +\begin{lstlisting} +new Pair[Int, Int](1, 2) . +\end{lstlisting} + +\section{Type Parameters} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + TypeParamClause ::= `[' TypeParam {`,' TypeParam} `]' + TypeParam ::= [`+' | `-'] TypeDcl +\end{lstlisting} + + +Type parameters appear in type definitions, class definitions, and +function definitions. The most general form of a type parameter is +~\lstinline@$\pm t$ >: $L$ <: $U$@. Here, $L$, and $U$ are lower +and upper bounds that constrain possible type arguments for the +parameter, and $\pm$ is a {\em variance}, i.e.\ an optional prefix +of either \lstinline@+@, or \lstinline@-@. + +\comment{ +The upper bound $U$ in a type parameter clauses may not be a final +class. The lower bound may not denote a value type.\todo{Why} +} +The names of all type parameters in a type parameter clause must be +pairwise different. The scope of a type parameter includes in each +case the whole type parameter clause. Therefore it is possible that a +type parameter appears as part of its own bounds or the bounds of +other type parameters in the same clause. However, a type parameter +may not be bounded directly or indirectly by itself. + +\example Here are some well-formed type parameter clauses: +\begin{lstlisting} +[s, t] +[ex <: Throwable] +[a <: Ord[b], b <: a] +[a, b, c >: a <: b] +\end{lstlisting} +The following type parameter clauses are illegal +since type parameter are bounded by themselves. +\begin{lstlisting} +[a >: a] +[a <: b, b <: c, c <: a] +\end{lstlisting} + +Variance annotations indicate how type instances with the given type +parameters vary with respect to subtyping (\sref{sec:subtyping}). A +`\lstinline@+@' variance indicates a covariant dependency, a `\lstinline@-@' +variance indicates a contravariant dependency, and a missing variance +indication indicates an invariant dependency. + +A variance annotation constrains the way the annotated type variable +may appear in the type or class which binds the type parameter. In a +type definition ~\lstinline@type $t$[$\tps\,$] = $S$@, type parameters labeled +`\lstinline@+@' must only appear in covariant position in $S$ whereas +type parameters labeled `\lstinline@-@' must only appear in contravariant +position. Analogously, for a class definition +~\lstinline@class $c$[$\tps\,$]($ps\,$): $s$ extends $t$@, type parameters labeled +`\lstinline@+@' must only appear in covariant position in the self type +$s$ and the template $t$, whereas type +parameters labeled `\lstinline@-@' must only appear in contravariant +position. + +The variance position of a type parameter in a type or template is +defined as follows. Let the opposite of covariance be contravariance, +and the opposite of invariance be itself. The top-level of the type +or template is always in covariant position. The variance position +changes at the following constructs. +\begin{itemize} +\item +The variance position of a method parameter is the opposite of the +variance position of the enclosing parameter clause. +\item +The variance position of a type parameter is the opposite of the +variance position of the enclosing type parameter clause. +\item +The variance position of the lower bound of a type declaration or type parameter +is the opposite of the variance position of the type declaration or parameter. +\item +The right hand side $S$ of a type alias ~\lstinline@type $t$[$\tps\,$] = $S$@~ +is always in invariant position. +\item +The type of a mutable variable is always in invariant position. +\item +The prefix $S$ of a type selection \lstinline@$S$#$T$@ is always in invariant position. +\item +For a type argument $T$ of a type ~\lstinline@$S$[$\ldots T \ldots$ ]@: If the +corresponding type parameter is invariant, then $T$ is in +invariant position. If the corresponding type parameter is +contravariant, the variance position of $T$ is the opposite of +the variance position of the enclosing type ~\lstinline@$S$[$\ldots T \ldots$ ]@. +\end{itemize} + +\example The following variance annotation is legal. +\begin{lstlisting} +class P[a, b] { + val fst: a, snd: b +}\end{lstlisting} +With this variance annotation, elements +of type $P$ subtype covariantly with respect to their arguments. +For instance, +\begin{lstlisting} +P[IOExeption, String] <: P[Throwable, AnyRef] . +\end{lstlisting} + +If we make the elements of $P$ mutable, +the variance annotation becomes illegal. +\begin{lstlisting} +class Q[+a, +b] { + var fst: a, snd: b // **** error: illegal variance: + // `a', `b' occur in invariant position. +} +\end{lstlisting} + +\example The following variance annotation is illegal, since $a$ appears +in contravariant position in the parameter of \code{append}: + +\begin{lstlisting} +trait Vector[+a] { + def append(x: Vector[a]): Vector[a]; + // **** error: illegal variance: + // `a' occurs in contravariant position. +} +\end{lstlisting} +The problem can be avoided by generalizing the type of \code{append} +by means of a lower bound: + +\begin{lstlisting} +trait Vector[+a] { + def append[b >: a](x: Vector[b]): Vector[b]; +} +\end{lstlisting} + +\example Here is a case where a contravariant type parameter is useful. + +\begin{lstlisting} +trait OutputChannel[-a] { + def write(x: a): unit +} +\end{lstlisting} +With that annotation, we have that +\lstinline@OutputChannel[AnyRef]@ conforms to \lstinline@OutputChannel[String]@. +That is, a +channel on which one can write any object can substitute for a channel +on which one can write only strings. + +\section{Function Declarations and Definitions} +\label{sec:defdef} +\label{sec:funsigs} +\label{sec:parameters} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} +Dcl ::= def FunDcl {`,' FunDcl} +FunDcl ::= id [FunTypeParamClause] {ParamClause} `:' Type +Def ::= def FunDef {`,' FunDef} +FunDef ::= id [FunTypeParamClause] {ParamClause} + [`:' Type] `=' Expr +FunTypeParamClause ::= `[' TypeDcl {`,' TypeDcl} `]' +ParamClause ::= `(' [Param {`,' Param}] `)' +Param ::= [def] id `:' Type [`*'] +\end{lstlisting} + +A function declaration has the form ~\lstinline@def $f \psig$: $T$@, where +$f$ is the function's name, $\psig$ is its parameter +signature and $T$ is its result type. A function definition +~\lstinline@$f \psig$: $T$ = $e$@~ also includes a {\em function body} $e$, +i.e.\ an expression which defines the function's result. A parameter +signature consists of an optional type parameter clause \lstinline@[$\tps\,$]@, +followed by zero or more value parameter clauses +~\lstinline@($ps_1$)$\ldots$($ps_n$)@. Such a declaration or definition +introduces a value with a (possibly polymorphic) method type whose +parameter types and result type are as given. + +A type parameter clause $\tps$ consists of one or more type +declarations (\sref{sec:typedcl}), which introduce type parameters, +possibly with bounds. The scope of a type parameter includes +the whole signature, including any of the type parameter bounds as +well as the function body, if it is present. + +A value parameter clause $ps$ consists of zero or more formal +parameter bindings such as \lstinline@$x$: $T$@, which bind value +parameters and associate them with their types. The scope of a formal +value parameter name $x$ is the function body, if one is +given. Both type parameter names and value parameter names must be +pairwise distinct. + +Value parameters may be prefixed by \code{def}, e.g.\ +~\lstinline@def $x$:$T$@. The type of such a parameter is then the +parameterless method type ~\lstinline@[]$T$@. This indicates that the +corresponding argument is not evaluated at the point of function +application, but instead is evaluated at each use within the +function. That is, the argument is evaluated using {\em call-by-name}. + +\example The declaration +\begin{lstlisting} +def whileLoop (def cond: Boolean) (def stat: Unit): Unit +\end{lstlisting} +produces the typing +\begin{lstlisting} +whileLoop: (cond: [] Boolean) (stat: [] Unit) Unit +\end{lstlisting} +which indicates that both parameters of \code{while} are evaluated using +call-by-name. + +The last value parameter of a parameter section may be suffixed by +``\code{*}'', e.g.\ ~\lstinline@(..., $x$:$T$*)@. The type of such a +{\em repeated} parameter inside the method is then the sequence type +\lstinline@scala.Seq[$T$]@. Methods with repeated parameters +\lstinline@$T$*@ take a variable number of arguments of type $T$. That is, +if a method $m$ with type ~\lstinline@($T_1 \commadots T_n, S$*)$U$@~ +is applied to arguments $(e_1 \commadots e_k)$ where $k \geq n$, then +$m$ is taken in that application to have type $(T_1 \commadots T_n, S +\commadots S)U$, with $k - n$ occurences of type $S$. +\todo{Change to ???: If the method +is converted to a function type instead of being applied immediately, +a repeated parameter \lstinline@$T$*@ is taken to be ~\lstinline@scala.Seq[$T$]@~ +instead.} + +\example The following method definition computes the sum of a variable number +of integer arguments. +\begin{lstlisting} +def sum(args: int*) { + var result = 0; + for (val arg <- args.elements) result = result + arg; + result +} +\end{lstlisting} +The following applications of this method yield \code{0}, \code{1}, +\code{6}, in that order. +\begin{lstlisting} +sum() +sum(1) +sum(1, 2, 3, 4, 5) +\end{lstlisting} + + +The type of the function body must conform to the function's declared +result type, if one is given. If the function definition is not +recursive, the result type may be omitted, in which case it is +determined from the type of the function body. + +\section{Overloaded Definitions} +\label{sec:overloaded-defs} +\todo{change} + +An overloaded definition is a set of $n > 1$ value or function +definitions in the same statement sequence that define the same name, +binding it to types ~\lstinline@$T_1 \commadots T_n$@, respectively. +The individual definitions are called {\em alternatives}. Overloaded +definitions may only appear in the statement sequence of a template. +Alternatives always need to specify the type of the defined entity +completely. It is an error if the types of two alternatives $T_i$ and +$T_j$ have the same erasure (\sref{sec:erasure}). + +\todo{Say something about bridge methods.} +%This must be a well-formed +%overloaded type + +\section{Import Clauses} +\label{sec:import} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + Import ::= import ImportExpr {`,' ImportExpr} + ImportExpr ::= StableId `.' (id | `_' | ImportSelectors) + ImportSelectors ::= `{' {ImportSelector `,'} + (ImportSelector | `_') `}' + ImportSelector ::= id [`=>' id | `=>' `_'] +\end{lstlisting} + +An import clause has the form ~\lstinline@import $p$.$I$@~ where $p$ is a stable +identifier (\sref{sec:paths}) and $I$ is an import expression. +The import expression determines a set of names of members of $p$ +which are made available without qualification. The most general form +of an import expression is a list of {\em import selectors} +\begin{lstlisting} +{ $x_1$ => $y_1 \commadots x_n$ => $y_n$, _ } +\end{lstlisting} +for $n \geq 0$, where the final wildcard `\lstinline@_@' may be absent. It +makes available each member \lstinline@$p$.$x_i$@ under the unqualified name +$y_i$. I.e.\ every import selector ~\lstinline@$x_i$ => $y_i$@~ renames +\lstinline@$p$.$x_i$@ to +$y_i$. If a final wildcard is present, all members $z$ of +$p$ other than ~\lstinline@$x_1 \commadots x_n$@~ are also made available +under their own unqualified names. + +Import selectors work in the same way for type and term members. For +instance, an import clause ~\lstinline@import $p$.{$x$ => $y\,$}@~ renames the term +name \lstinline@$p$.$x$@ to the term name $y$ and the type name \lstinline@$p$.$x$@ +to the type name $y$. At least one of these two names must +reference a member of $p$. + +If the target in an import selector is a wildcard, the import selector +hides access to the source member. For instance, the import selector +~\lstinline@$x$ => _@~ ``renames'' $x$ to the wildcard symbol (which is +unaccessible as a name in user programs), and thereby effectively +prevents unqualified access to $x$. This is useful if there is a +final wildcard in the same import selector list, which imports all +members not mentioned in previous import selectors. + +Several shorthands exist. An import selector may be just a simple name +$x$. In this case, $x$ is imported without renaming, so the +import selector is equivalent to ~\lstinline@$x$ => $x$@. Furthermore, it is +possible to replace the whole import selector list by a single +identifier or wildcard. The import clause ~\lstinline@import $p$.$x$@~ is +equivalent to ~\lstinline@import $p$.{$x\,$}@~, i.e.\ it makes available without +qualification the member $x$ of $p$. The import clause +~\lstinline@import $p$._@~ is equivalent to +~\lstinline@import $p$.{_}@, +i.e.\ it makes available without qualification all members of $p$ +(this is analogous to ~\lstinline@import $p$.*@~ in Java). + +An import clause with multiple import expressions +~\lstinline@import $p_1$.$I_1 \commadots p_n$.$I_n$@~ is interpreted as a +sequence of import clauses +~\lstinline@import $p_1$.$I_1$; $\ldots$; import $p_n$.$I_n$@. + +\example Consider the object definition: +\begin{lstlisting} +object M { + def z = 0, one = 1; + def add(x: Int, y: Int): Int = x + y +} +\end{lstlisting} +Then the block +\begin{lstlisting} +{ import M.{one, z => zero, _}; add(zero, one) } +\end{lstlisting} +is equivalent to the block +\begin{lstlisting} +{ M.add(M.z, M.one) } . +\end{lstlisting} + +\chapter{Classes and Objects} +\label{sec:globaldefs} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + ClsDef ::= ([case] class | trait) ClassDef {`,' ClassDef} + | [case] object ObjectDef {`,' ObjectDef} +\end{lstlisting} + +Classes (\sref{sec:classes}) and objects +(\sref{sec:modules}) are both defined in terms of {\em templates}. + +\section{Templates} +\label{sec:templates} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + Template ::= Constr {`with' Constr} [TemplateBody] + TemplateBody ::= `{' [TemplateStat {`;' TemplateStat}] `}' +\end{lstlisting} + +A template defines the type signature, behavior and initial state of a +class of objects or of a single object. Templates form part of +instance creation expressions, class definitions, and object +definitions. A template +~\lstinline@$sc$ with $mc_1$ with $\ldots$ with $mc_n$ {$\stats\,$}@~ +consists of a constructor invocation $sc$ +which defines the template's {\em superclass}, constructor invocations +~\lstinline@$mc_1 \commadots mc_n$@~ $(n \geq 0)$, which define the +template's {\em mixin classes}, and a statement sequence $\stats$ which +contains additional member definitions for the template. Superclass +and mixin classes together are called the {\em parent classes} of a +template. They must be pairwise different. The superclass of a +template must be a subtype of the superclass of each mixin class. The +{\em least proper supertype} of a template is the class type or +compound type (\sref{sec:compound-types}) consisting of the its parent +classes. + +\todo{introduce ScalaObject} + +Member definitions define new members or overwrite members in the +parent classes. If the template forms part of a class definition, +the statement part $\stats$ may also contain declarations of abstract members. +%The type of each non-private definition or declaration of a +%template must be equivalent to a type which does not refer to any +%private members of that template. + +\todo{Make all references to Java generic} + +\paragraph{Inheriting from Java Types} A template may have a Java class as +its superclass and Java interfaces as its mixin classes. On the other +hand, it is not permitted to have a Java class as a mixin class, or a +Java interface as a superclass. + +\subsection{Constructor Invocations} +\label{sec:constr-invoke} +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + Constr ::= StableId [TypeArgs] [`(' [Exprs] `)'] +\end{lstlisting} + +Constructor invocations define the type, members, and initial state of +objects created by an instance creation expression, or of parts of an +object's definition which are inherited by a class or object +definition. A constructor invocation is a function application +\lstinline@$x$.$c$($\args\,$)@, where $x$ is a stable identifier +(\sref{sec:stable-ids}), $c$ is a type name which either +designates a class or defines an alias type for one, and $\args$ +is an argument list, which matches one of the constructors of that +class. The prefix `\lstinline@$x$.@' can be omitted. +%The class $c$ must conform to \lstinline@scala.AnyRef@, +%i.e.\ it may not be a value type. +The argument list \lstinline@($\args\,$)@ can also be omitted, in which case an +empty argument list \lstinline@()@ is implicitly added. + +\subsection{Base Classes} +\label{sec:base-classes} + +For every template, class type and constructor invocation we define +two sets of class types: the {\em base classes} and {\em mixin base +classes}. Their definitions are as follows. + +The {\em mixin base classes} of a template +~\lstinline@$sc$ with $mc_1$ with $\ldots$ with $mc_n$ {$\stats\,$}@~ +are +the reduced union (\sref{sec:base-classes-member-defs}) of the base classes of all +mixins $mc_i$. The mixin base classes of a class type $C$ are the +mixin base classes of the template augmented by $C$ itself. The +mixin base classes of a constructor invocation of type $T$ are the +mixin base classes of class $T$. + +The {\em base classes} of a template consist are the reduced union of +the base classes of its superclass and the template's mixin base +classes. The base classes of class \lstinline@scala.Any@ consist of +just the class itself. The base classes of some other class type $C$ +are the base classes of the template represented by $C$ augmented by +$C$ itself. The base classes of a constructor invocation of type $T$ +are the base classes of $T$. + +The notions of mixin base classes and base classes are extended from +classes to arbitrary types following the definitions of +\sref{sec:base-classes-member-defs}. + +\comment{ +If two types in the base class sequence of a template refer to the +same class definition, then that definition must define a trait +(\sref{sec:traits}), and the type that comes later in the sequence must +conform to the type that comes first. +(\sref{sec:base-classes-member-defs}). +} + +\example +Consider the following class definitions: +\begin{lstlisting} +class A; +class B extends A; +trait C extends A; +class D extends A; +class E extends B with C with D; +class F extends B with D with E; +\end{lstlisting} +The mixin base classes and base classes of classes \code{A-F} are given in +the following table: +\begin{quote}\begin{tabular}{|l|l|l|} \hline + \ & Mixin base classses & Base classes \\ \hline +A & A & A, ScalaObject, AnyRef, Any \\ +B & B & B, A, ScalaObject, AnyRef, Any \\ +C & C & C, A, ScalaObject, AnyRef, Any \\ +D & D & D, A, ScalaObject, AnyRef, Any \\ +E & C, D, E & E, B, C, D, A, ScalaObject, AnyRef, Any \\ +F & C, D, E, F & F, B, D, E, C, A, ScalaObject, AnyRef, Any \\ \hline +\end{tabular}\end{quote} +Note that \code{D} is inherited twice by \code{F}, once directly, the +other time indirectly throgh \code{E}. This is permitted, since +\code{D} is a trait. + + +\subsection{Evaluation} + +The evaluation of a template or constructor invocation depends on +whether the template defines an object or is a superclass of a +constructed object, or whether it is used as a mixin for a defined +object. In the second case, the evaluation of a template used as a +mixin depends on an {\em actual superclass}, which is known at the +point where the template is used in a definition of an object, but not +at the point where it is defined. The actual superclass is used in the +determination of the meaning of \code{super} (\sref{sec:this-super}). + +We therefore define two notions of template evaluation: (Plain) +evaluation (as a defining template or superclass) and mixin evaluation +with a given superclass $sc$. These notions are defined for templates +and constructor invocations as follows. + +A {\em mixin evaluation with superclass $sc$} of a template +~\lstinline@$sc'$ with $mc_1$ with $mc_n$ {$\stats\,$}@~ consists of mixin +evaluations with superclass $sc$ of the mixin constructor invocations +~\lstinline@$mc_1 \commadots mc_n$@~ in the order they are given, followed by an +evaluation of the statement sequence $\stats$. Within $\stats$ the +actual superclass refers to $sc$. A mixin evaluation with superclass +$sc$ of a class constructor invocation \code{ci} consists of an evaluation +of the constructor function and its arguments in the order they are +given, followed by a mixin evaluation with superclass $sc$ of the +template represented by the constructor invocation. + +An {\em evaluation} of a template +~\lstinline@$sc$ with $mc_1$ with $mc_n$ with ($\stats\,$)@~ consists of an evaluation of +the superclass constructor invocation $sc$, +followed by a mixin evaluation with superclass $sc$ of the template. An +evaluation of a class constructor invocation \code{ci} consists of an +evaluation of the constructor function and its arguments in +the order they are given, followed by an evaluation of the template +represented by the constructor invocation. + +\subsection{Template Members} + +\label{sec:members} + +The object resulting from evaluation of a template has directly bound +members and inherited members. Members can be abstract or concrete. +For a template $T$ these categories are defined as follows. +\begin{enumerate} +\item +A {\em directly bound} member of $T$ is an entity introduced by a member +definition or declaration in $T$'s statement sequence. The +member is called {\em abstract} if it is introduced by a declaration, +{\em concrete} otherwise. +\item +A {\em concrete inherited} member of $T$ is a non-private, concrete member of +one of $T$'s parent classes, except if a member with the same name is +already directly bound in $T$ or the member is mixin-overridden in +$T$. A member $m$ of $T$'s superclass is {\em mixin-overridden} in $T$ +if there is a concrete member of a mixin base class of $T$ which +either overrides $m$ itself or overrides a member named $m$ of a base +class of $T$'s superclass. +\item +An {\em abstract inherited} member of $T$ is a non-private, abstract member +of one of $T$'s parent classes $P_i$, except if the template has a +directly bound or concrete inherited member with the same name, or the +template has an abstract member inherited from a parent class $P_j$ where +$j > i$\todo{OK to leave out?: , and which has the same modifiers and type as the member +inherited from $P_j$ would have in $T$}. +\end{enumerate} +It is an error if a template has more than one member with +the same name. + + + +\comment{ +The type of a member $m$ is determined as follows: If $m$ is defined +in $\stats$, then its type is the type as given in the member's +declaration or definition. Otherwise, if $m$ is inherited from the +base class ~\lstinline@$B$[$T_1$, $\ldots$. $T_n$]@, $B$'s class declaration has formal +parameters ~\lstinline@[$a_1 \commadots a_n$]@, and $M$'s type in $B$ is $U$, then +$M$'s type in $C$ is ~\lstinline@$U$[$a_1$ := $T_1 \commadots a_n$ := $T_n$]@. + +\ifqualified{ +Members of templates have internally qualified names $Q\qex x$ where +$x$ is a simple name and $Q$ is either the empty name $\epsilon$, or +is a qualified name referencing the module or class that first +introduces the member. A basic declaration or definition of $x$ in a +module or class $M$ introduces a member with the following qualified +name: +\begin{enumerate} +\item +If the binding is labeled with an ~\lstinline@override $Q$@\notyet{Override + with qualifier} modifier, +where $Q$ is a fully qualified name of a base class of $M$, then the +qualified name is the qualified expansion (\sref{sec:names}) of $x$ in +$Q$. +\item +If the binding is labeled with an \code{override} modifier without a +base class name, then the qualified name is the qualified expansion +of $x$ in $M$'s least proper supertype (\sref{sec:templates}). +\item +An implicit \code{override} modifier is added and case (2) also +applies if $M$'s least proper supertype contains an abstract member +with simple name $x$. +\item +If no \code{override} modifier is given or implied, then if $M$ is +labeled \code{qualified}, the qualified name is $M\qex x$. If $M$ is +not labeled \code{qualified}, the qualified name is $\epsilon\qex x$. +\end{enumerate} +} +} + +\example Consider the class definitions + +\begin{lstlisting} +class A { def f: Int = 1 ; def g: Int = 2 ; def h: Int = 3 } +abstract class B { def f: Int = 4 ; def g: Int } +abstract class C extends A with B { def h: Int } +\end{lstlisting} + +Then class \code{C} has a directly bound abstract member \code{h}. It +inherits member \code{f} from class \code{B} and member \code{g} from +class \code{A}. + +\ifqualified{ +\example\label{ex:compound-b} +Consider the definitions: +\begin{lstlisting} +qualified class Root extends Any { def r1: Root, r2: Int } +qualified class A extends Root { def r1: A, a: String } +qualified class B extends A { def r1: B, b: Double } +\end{lstlisting} +Then ~\lstinline@A with B@~ has members +\lstinline@Root::r1@ of type \code{B}, \lstinline@Root::r2@ of type \code{Int}, +\lstinline@A::a:@ of type \code{String}, and \lstinline@B::b@ of type \code{Double}, +in addition to the members inherited from class \code{Any}. +} + +\subsection{Overriding} +\label{sec:overriding} + +A template member $M$ that has the same \ifqualified{qualified} name +as a non-private member $M'$ of a base class (and that belongs to the +same namespace) is said to {\em override} that member. In this case +the binding of the overriding member $M$ must subsume +(\sref{sec:subtyping}) the binding of the overridden member $M'$. +Furthermore, the overridden definition may not be a class definition. +Method definitions may only override other method definitions (or the +methods implicitly defined by a variable definition). They may not +override value definitions. Finally, the following restrictions +on modifiers apply to $M$ and $M'$: +\begin{itemize} +\item +$M'$ must not be labeled \code{final}. +\item +$M$ must not be labeled \code{private}. +\item +If $M$ is labeled \code{protected}, then $M'$ must also be +labeled \code{protected}. +\item +If $M'$ is not an abstract member, then +$M$ must be labeled \code{override}. +\item +If $M'$ is labelled \code{abstract} and \code{override}, and $M'$ is a +member of the static superclass of the class containing the definition +of $M$, then $M$ must also be labelled \code{abstract} and +\code{override}. +\end{itemize} + +\example\label{ex:compound-a} +Consider the definitions: +\begin{lstlisting} +trait Root { type T <: Root } +trait A extends Root { type T <: A } +trait B extends Root { type T <: B } +trait C extends A with B; +\end{lstlisting} +Then the trait definition \code{C} is not well-formed because the +binding of \code{T} in \code{C} is +~\lstinline@type T <: B@, +which fails to subsume the binding ~\lstinline@type T <: A@~ of \code{T} +in type \code{A}. The problem can be solved by adding an overriding +definition of type \code{T} in class \code{C}: +\begin{lstlisting} +class C extends A with B { type T <: C } +\end{lstlisting} + +\subsection{Modifiers} +\label{sec:modifiers} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + Modifier ::= LocalModifier + | private + | protected + | override + LocalModifier ::= abstract + | final + | sealed +\end{lstlisting} + +Member definitions may be preceded by modifiers which affect the +\ifqualified{qualified names, }accessibility and usage of the +identifiers bound by them. If several modifiers are given, their +order does not matter, but the same modifier may not occur repeatedly. +Modifiers preceding a repeated definition apply to all constituent +definitions. The rules governing the validity and meaning of a +modifier are as follows. +\begin{itemize} +\item +The \code{private} modifier can be used with any definition in a +template. Private members can be accessed only from within the template +that defines them. +%Furthermore, accesses are not permitted in +%packagings (\sref{sec:topdefs}) other than the one containing the +%definition. +Private members are not inherited by subclasses and they +may not override definitions in parent classes. +\code{private} may not be applied to abstract members, and it +may not be combined in one modifier list with +\code{protected}, \code{final} or \code{override}. +\item +The \code{protected} modifier applies to class member definitions. +Protected members can be accessed from within the template of the defining +class as well as in all templates that have the defining class as a base class. +%Furthermore, accesses from the template of the defining class are not +%permitted in packagings other than the one +%containing the definition. +A protected identifier $x$ may be used as +a member name in a selection \lstinline@$r$.$x$@ only if $r$ is one of the reserved +words \code{this} and +\code{super}, or if $r$'s type conforms to a type-instance of the class +which contains the access. +\item +The \code{override} modifier applies to class member definitions. It +is mandatory for member definitions that override some other concrete +member definition in a super- or mixin-class. If an \code{override} +modifier is given, there must be at least one overridden member +definition. + +The \code{override} modifier has an additional significance when +combined with the \code{abstract} modifier. That modifier combination +is only allowed for members of abstract classes. A member +labelled \code{abstract} and \code{override} must override some +member of the superclass of the class containing the definition. + +We call a member of a template {\em incomplete} if it is either +abstract (i.e.\ defined by a declaration), or it is labelled +\code{abstract} and \code{override} and it overrides an incomplete +member of the template's superclass. + +Note that the \code{abstract override} modifier combination does not +influence the concept whether a member is concrete or +abstract. A member for which only a declaration is given is abstract, +whereas a member for which a full definition is given is concrete. + +\item +The \code{abstract} modifier is used in class definitions. It is +mandatory if the class has incomplete members. Abstract classes +cannot be instantiated (\sref{sec:inst-creation}) with a constructor +invocation unless followed by mixin constructors or statements which +override all incomplete members of the class. + +The \code{abstract} modifier can also be used in conjunction with +\code{override} for class member definitions. In that case the meaning +of the previous discussion applies. +\item +The \code{final} modifier applies to class member definitions and to +class definitions. A \code{final} class member definition may not be +overridden in subclasses. A \code{final} class may not be inherited by +a template. \code{final} is redundant for object definitions. Members +of final classes or objects are implicitly also final, so the +\code{final} modifier is redundant for them, too. \code{final} may +not be applied to incomplete members, and it may not be combined in one +modifier list with \code{private} or \code{sealed}. +\item +The \code{sealed} modifier applies to class definitions. A +\code{sealed} class may not be inherited, except if either +\begin{itemize} +\item +the inheriting template is nested within the definition of the sealed +class itself, or +\item +the inheriting template belongs to a class or object definition which +forms part of the same statement sequence as the definition of the +sealed class. +\end{itemize} +\end{itemize} + +\example A useful idiom to prevent clients of a class from +constructing new instances of that class is to declare the class +\code{abstract} and \code{sealed}: + +\begin{lstlisting} +object m { + abstract sealed class C (x: Int) { + def nextC = C(x + 1) {} + } + val empty = new C(0) {} +} +\end{lstlisting} +For instance, in the code above clients can create instances of class +\lstinline@m.C@ only by calling the \code{nextC} method of an existing \lstinline@m.C@ +object; it is not possible for clients to create objects of class +\lstinline@m.C@ directly. Indeed the following two lines are both in error: + +\begin{lstlisting} + m.C(0) // **** error: C is abstract, so it cannot be instantiated. + m.C(0) {} // **** error: illegal inheritance from sealed class. +\end{lstlisting} + +\section{Class Definitions} +\label{sec:classes} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + ClsDef ::= class ClassDef {`,' ClassDef} + ClassDef ::= id [TypeParamClause] [ParamClause] + [`:' SimpleType] ClassTemplate + ClassTemplate ::= extends Template + | TemplateBody + | +\end{lstlisting} + +The most general form of class definition is +~\lstinline@class $c$[$\tps\,$]($ps\,$): $s$ extends $t$@. +Here, +\begin{itemize} +\item[] +$c$ is the name of the class to be defined. +\item[] $\tps$ is a non-empty list of type parameters of the class +being defined. The scope of a type parameter is the whole class +definition including the type parameter section itself. It is +illegal to define two type parameters with the same name. The type +parameter section \lstinline@[$\tps\,$]@ may be omitted. A class with a type +parameter section is called {\em polymorphic}, otherwise it is called +{\em monomorphic}. +\item[] +$ps$ is a formal value parameter clause for the {\em primary +constructor} of the class. The scope of a formal value parameter includes +the template $t$. However, a formal value parameter may not form +part of the types of any of the parent classes or members of $t$. +It is illegal to define two formal value parameters with the same name. +The formal parameter section \lstinline@($ps\,$)@ may be omitted, in which case +an empty parameter section \lstinline@()@ is assumed. +\item[] +$s$ is the {\em self type} of the class. Inside the +class, the type of \code{this} is assumed to be $s$. The self +type must conform to the self types of all classes which are inherited +by the template $t$. The self type declaration `\lstinline@:$s$@' may be +omitted, in which case the self type of the class is assumed to be +equal to \lstinline@$c$[$\tps\,$]@. +\item[] +$t$ is a +template (\sref{sec:templates}) of the form +\begin{lstlisting} +$sc$ with $mc_1$ with $\ldots$ with $mc_n$ { $\stats$ } $\gap(n \geq 0)$ +\end{lstlisting} +which defines the base classes, behavior and initial state of objects of +the class. The extends clause ~\lstinline@extends $sc$@~ +can be omitted, in which case +~\lstinline@extends scala.AnyRef@~ is assumed. The class body +~\lstinline@{$\stats\,$}@~ may also be omitted, in which case the empty body +\lstinline@{}@ is assumed. +\end{itemize} +This class definition defines a type \lstinline@$c$[$\tps\,$]@ and a constructor +which when applied to parameters conforming to types $ps$ +initializes instances of type \lstinline@$c$[$\tps\,$]@ by evaluating the template +$t$. + +\subsection{Constructor Definitions}\label{sec:constr-defs} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + FunDef ::= this ParamClause`=' ConstrExpr + ConstrExpr ::= this ArgumentExprs + | `{' this ArgumentExprs {`;' BlockStat} `}' +\end{lstlisting} + +A class may have additional constructors besides the primary +constructor. These are defined by constructor definitions of the form +~\lstinline@def this($ps\,$) = $e$@. Such a definition introduces an +additional constructor for the enclosing class, with parameters as +given in the formal parameter list $ps$, and whose evaluation is +defined by the constructor expression $e$. The scope of each formal +parameter is the constructor expression $e$. A constructor expression +is either a self constructor invocation \lstinline@this($\args\,$)@ or +a block which begins with a self constructor invocation. Neither the +signature, nor the self constructor invocation of a constructor +definition may refer to \verb@this@, or refer to value parameters or +members of the enclosing class by simple name. + +If there are auxiliary constructors of a class $C$, they define +together with $C$'s primary constructor an overloaded constructor +value. The usual rules for overloading resolution +(\sref{sec:overloaded-defs}) apply for constructor invocations of $C$, +including the self constructor invocations in the constructor +expressions themselves. To prevent infinite cycles of constructor +invocations, there is the restriction that every self constructor +invocation must refer to a constructor definition which precedes it +(i.e. it must refer to either a preceding auxiliary constructor or the +primary constructor of the class). The type of a constructor +expression must be always so that a generic instance of the class is +constructed. I.e., if the class in question has name $C$ and type +parameters \lstinline@[$\tps\,$]@, then each constructor must construct an +instance of \lstinline@$C$[$\tps\,$]@; it is not permitted to instantiate formal +type parameters. + +\example Consider the class definition + +\begin{lstlisting} +class LinkedList[a]() { + var head = _; + var tail = null; + def isEmpty = tail != null; + def this(head: a) = { this(); this.head = head; } + def this(head: a, tail: List[a]) = { this(head); this.tail = tail } +} +\end{lstlisting} +This defines a class \code{LinkedList} with an overloaded constructor of type +\begin{lstlisting} +[a](): LinkedList[a] $\overload$ +[a](x: a): LinkedList[a] $\overload$ +[a](x: a, xs: LinkList[a]): LinkedList[a] . +\end{lstlisting} +The second constructor alternative constructs an singleton list, while the +third one constructs a list with a given head and tail. + +\subsection{Case Classes} +\label{sec:case-classes} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + ClsDef ::= case class ClassDef {`,' ClassDef} +\end{lstlisting} + +If a class definition is prefixed with \code{case}, the class is said +to be a {\em case class}. The primary constructor of a case class may +be used in a constructor pattern (\sref{sec:patterns}). +The following four restrictions ensure efficient pattern matching for +case classes. +\begin{enumerate} +\item None of the base classes of a case class may be a case +class. +\item No type may have two different case classes among its base types. +\item A case class may not inherit indirectly from a +\lstinline@sealed@ class. That is, if a base class $b$ of a case class $c$ +is marked \lstinline@sealed@, then $b$ must be a parent class of $c$. +\item +The primary constructor of a case class may not have any call-by-name +parameters (\sref{sec:parameters}). +\end{enumerate} + +A case class definition of ~\lstinline@$c$[$\tps\,$]($ps\,$)@~ with type +parameters $\tps$ and value parameters $ps$ implicitly +generates a function definition for a {\em case class factory} +together with the class definition itself: +\begin{lstlisting} +def c[$\tps\,$]($ps\,$): $s$ = new $c$[$\tps\,$]($ps\,$) +\end{lstlisting} +(Here, $s$ is the self type of class $c$. +If a type parameter section +is missing in the class, it is also missing in the factory +definition). + +Also implicitly defined are accessor member definitions +in the class that return its value parameters. Every binding +$x: T$ in the parameter section leads to a value definition of +$x$ that defines $x$ to be an alias of the parameter. +%Every +%parameterless function binding \lstinline@def x: T@ leads to a +%parameterless function definition of $x$ which returns the result +%of invoking the parameter function. +%The case class may not contain a +%directly bound member with the same simple name as one of its value +%parameters. + +Every case class implicitly overrides some method definitions of class +\lstinline@scala.AnyRef@ (\sref{sec:cls-object}) unless a definition of the same +method is already given in the case class itself or a concrete +definition of the same method is given in some base class of the case +class different from \code{AnyRef}. In particular: +\begin{itemize} +\item[] Method ~\lstinline@equals: (Any)boolean@~ is structural equality, where two +instances are equal if they belong to the same class and +have equal (with respect to \code{equals}) primary constructor arguments. +\item[] Method ~\lstinline@hashCode: ()int@~ computes a hash-code +depending on the data structure in a way which maps equal (with respect to +\code{equals}) values to equal hash-codes. +\item[] Method ~\lstinline@toString: ()String@~ returns a string representation which +contains the name of the class and its primary constructor arguments. +\end{itemize} + +\example Here is the definition of abstract syntax for lambda +calculus: + +\begin{lstlisting} +class Expr; +case class + Var (x: String) extends Expr, + Apply (f: Expr, e: Expr) extends Expr, + Lambda (x: String, e: Expr) extends Expr; +\end{lstlisting} +This defines a class \code{Expr} with case classes +\code{Var}, \code{Apply} and \code{Lambda}. A call-by-value evaluator for lambda +expressions could then be written as follows. + +\begin{lstlisting} +type Env = String => Value; +case class Value(e: Expr, env: Env); + +def eval(e: Expr, env: Env): Value = e match { + case Var (x) => + env(x) + case Apply(f, g) => + val Value(Lambda (x, e1), env1) = eval(f, env); + val v = eval(g, env); + eval (e1, (y => if (y == x) v else env1(y))) + case Lambda(_, _) => + Value(e, env) +} +\end{lstlisting} + +It is possible to define further case classes that extend type +\code{Expr} in other parts of the program, for instance +\begin{lstlisting} +case class Number(x: Int) extends Expr; +\end{lstlisting} + +This form of extensibility can be excluded by declaring the base class +\code{Expr} \code{sealed}; in this case, the only classes permitted to +extend \code{Expr} are those which are nested inside \code{Expr}, or +which appear in the same statement sequence as the definition of +\code{Expr}. + +\section{Traits} + +\label{sec:traits} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + ClsDef ::= trait ClassDef {`,' ClassDef} +\end{lstlisting} + +A class definition which starts with the reserved word \code{trait} +instead of \code{class} defines a trait. A trait is a specific +instance of an abstract class, so the \code{abstract} modifier is +redundant for it. The template of a trait must satisfy the following +three restrictions. +\begin{enumerate} +\item All base classes of the trait are traits. +\item All parent class constructors of a template + must be primary constructors with empty value + parameter lists. +\item All non-empty statements in the template are either imports or pure definitions. +\end{enumerate} +A {\em pure} definition can be evaluated without any side effect. +Function, type, class, or object definitions are always pure. A value +definition is pure if its right-hand side expression is pure. Pure +expressions are paths, literals, and typed expressions +$e: T$ where $e$ is pure. + +These restrictions ensure that the evaluation of the mixin constructor +of a trait has no effect. Therefore, traits may appear several times +in the base classes of a template, whereas other classes cannot. +%\item Packagings may add interface classes as new base classes to an +%existing class or module. + +\example\label{ex:comparable} +The following trait class defines the property of being +ordered, i.e. comparable to objects of some type. It contains an abstract method +\lstinline@<@ and default implementations of the other comparison operators +\lstinline@<=@, \lstinline@>@, and \lstinline@>=@. + +\begin{lstlisting} +trait Ord[t <: Ord[t]]: t { + def < (that: t): Boolean; + def <=(that: t): Boolean = this < that || this == that; + def > (that: t): Boolean = that < this; + def >=(that: t): Boolean = that <= this; +} +\end{lstlisting} + +\section{Object Definitions} +\label{sec:modules} +\label{sec:object-defs} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + ObjectDef ::= id [`:' SimpleType] ClassTemplate +\end{lstlisting} + +An object definition defines a single object of a new class. Its +most general form is +~\lstinline@object $m$: $s$ extends $t$@. Here, +\begin{itemize} +\item[] +$m$ is the name of the object to be defined. +\item[] $s$ is the {\em self type} of the object. References to $m$ +are assumed to have type $s$. Furthermore, inside the template $t$, +the type of \code{this} is also assumed to be $s$. The type of the +anonymous class defined by $t$ must conform to $s$ and $s$ must +conform to the self types of all classes which are inherited by +$t$. The self type declaration `$:s$' may be omitted, in which case +the self type is assumed to be equal to the anonymous class defined by +$t$. +\item[] +$t$ is a +template (\sref{sec:templates}) of the form +\begin{lstlisting} +$sc$ with $mc_1$ with $\ldots$ with $mc_n$ { $\stats$ } +\end{lstlisting} +which defines the base classes, behavior and initial state of $m$. +The extends clause ~\lstinline@extends $sc$@~ +can be omitted, in which case +~\lstinline@extends scala.AnyRef@~ is assumed. The class body +~\lstinline@{$\stats\,$}@~ may also be omitted, in which case the empty body +\lstinline@{}@ is assumed. +\end{itemize} +The object definition defines a single object (or: {\em module}) +conforming to the template $t$. It is roughly equivalent to a class +definition and a value definition that creates an object of the class: +\begin{lstlisting} +final class $m\Dollar$cls: $s$ extends $t$; +final val $m$: $s$ = new m$\Dollar$cls; +\end{lstlisting} +(The \code{final} modifiers are omitted if the definition occurs as +part of a block. The class name \lstinline@$m\Dollar$cls@ is not +accessible for user programs.) + +There are however two differences between an object definition and a +pair of class and value definitions such as the one given above. First, +object definitions may appear as top-level definitions in a +compilation unit, whereas value definitions may not. Second, the +module defined by an object definition is instantiated lazily. The +~\lstinline@new $m\Dollar$cls@~ constructor is evaluated not at the point +of the object definition, but is instead evaluated the first time $m$ +is dereferenced during execution of the program (which might be never +at all). An attempt to dereference $m$ again in the course of +evaluation of the constructor leads to a infinite loop or run-time +error. Other threads trying to dereference $m$ while the constructor +is being evaluated block until evaluation is complete. + +\example +Classes in Scala do not have static members; however, an equivalent +effect can be achieved by an accompanying object definition +E.g. +\begin{lstlisting} +abstract class Point { + val x: Double; + val y: Double; + def isOrigin = (x == 0.0 && y == 0.0); +} +object Point { + val origin = new Point() { val x = 0.0, y = 0.0 } +} +\end{lstlisting} +This defines a class \code{Point} and an object \code{Point} which +contains \code{origin} as a member. Note that the double use of the +name \code{Point} is legal, since the class definition defines the name +\code{Point} in the type name space, whereas the object definition +defines a name in the term namespace. + +This technique is applied by the Scala compiler when interpreting a +Java class with static members. Such a class $C$ is conceptually seen +as a pair of a Scala class that contains all instance members of $C$ +and a Scala object that contains all static members of $C$. + +\comment{ +\example Here's an outline of a module definition for a file system. + +\begin{lstlisting} +module FileSystem { + private type FileDirectory; + private val dir: FileDirectory + + interface File { + def read(xs: Array[Byte]) + def close: Unit + } + + private class FileHandle extends File { $\ldots$ } + + def open(name: String): File = $\ldots$ +} +\end{lstlisting} +} + +\chapter{Expressions} +\label{sec:exprs} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + Expr ::= [Bindings `=>'] Expr + | Expr1 + Expr1 ::= if `(' Expr `)' Expr [[`;'] else Expr] + | try `{' block `}' [catch Expr] [finally Expr] + | while '(' Expr ')' Expr + | do Expr [`;'] while `(' Expr ')' + | for `(' Enumerators `)' (do | yield) Expr + | return [Expr] + | throw Expr + | [SimpleExpr `.'] id `=' Expr + | SimpleExpr ArgumentExprs `=' Expr + | PostfixExpr [`:' Type1] + PostfixExpr ::= InfixExpr [id] + InfixExpr ::= PrefixExpr + | InfixExpr id PrefixExpr + PrefixExpr ::= [`-' | `+' | `~' | `!'] SimpleExpr + SimpleExpr ::= Literal + | Path + | `(' [Expr] `)' + | BlockExpr + | new Template + | SimpleExpr `.' id + | SimpleExpr TypeArgs + | SimpleExpr ArgumentExprs + ArgumentExprs ::= `(' [Exprs] ')' + | BlockExpr + BlockExpr ::= `{' CaseClause {CaseClause} `}' + | `{' Block `}' + Block ::= {BlockStat `;'} [ResultExpr] + ResultExpr ::= Expr1 + | Bindings `=>' Block + Exprs ::= Expr {`,' Expr} +\end{lstlisting} + +Expressions are composed of operators and operands. Expression forms are +discussed subsequently in decreasing order of precedence. + +The typing of expressions is often relative to some {\em expected +type}. When we write ``expression $e$ is expected to conform to +type $T$'', we mean: (1) the expected type of $e$ is +$T$, and (2) the type of expression $e$ must conform to +$T$. + +\section{Literals} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + SimpleExpr ::= Literal + Literal ::= intLit + | floatLit + | charLit + | stringLit + | symbolLit + | true + | false + | null +\end{lstlisting} + +Typing and evaluation of numeric, character, and string literals are +generally as in Java. An integer literal denotes an integer +number. Its type is normally \code{int}. However, if the expected type +$\proto$ of the expression is either \code{byte}, \code{short}, or +\code{char} and the integer number fits in the numeric range defined +by the type, then the number is converted to type $\proto$ and the +expression's type is $\proto$. A floating point literal denotes a +single-precision or double precision IEEE floating point number. A +character literal denotes a Unicode character. A string literal +denotes a member of \lstinline@String@. + +A symbol literal ~\lstinline@'$x$@~ is a shorthand for the expression +~\lstinline@scala.Symbol("$x$")@. If the symbol literal is followed by +actual parameters, as in ~\lstinline@'$x$($\args\,$)@, then the whole +expression is taken to be a shorthand for +~\lstinline@scala.Symbol("$x$", $\args\,$)@. + +The boolean truth values are denoted by the reserved words \code{true} +and \code{false}. The type of these expressions is \code{boolean}, and +their evaluation is immediate. + +The \code{null} literal is of type \lstinline@scala.AllRef@. It +denotes a reference value which refers to a special ``null' object, +which implements methods in class \lstinline@scala.AnyRef@ as follows: +\begin{itemize} +\item +\lstinline@eq($x\,$)@, \lstinline@==($x\,$)@, \lstinline@equals($x\,$)@ return \code{true} iff their +argument $x$ is also the ``null'' object. +\item +\lstinline@isInstanceOf[$T\,$]@ always returns \code{false}. +\item +\lstinline@asInstanceOf[$T\,$]@ returns the ``null'' object itself if +$T$ conforms to \lstinline@scala.AnyRef@, and throws a +\lstinline@NullPointerException@ otherwise. +\item +\code{toString()} returns the string ``null''. +\end{itemize} +A reference to any other member of the ``null'' object causes a +\code{NullPointerException} to be thrown. + +\section{Designators} +\label{sec:designators} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + Designator ::= Path + | SimpleExpr `.' id +\end{lstlisting} + +A designator refers to a named term. It can be a {\em simple name} or +a {\em selection}. If $r$ is a stable identifier of type $T$, the +selection $r.x$ refers to the term member of $r$ that is identified in +$T$ by the name $x$. For other expressions $e$, $e.x$ is typed as if +it was $(\VAL;y=e\semi y.x)$ for some fresh name $y$. The typing rules +for blocks implies that in that case $x$'s type may not refer to any +abstract type member of $e$. + +The expected type of a designator's prefix is always missing. +The +type of a designator is normally the type of the entity it refers +to. However, if the designator is a path (\sref{sec:paths}) $p$, +its type is \lstinline@$p$.type@, provided the expression's expected type is +a singleton type, or $p$ occurs as the prefix of a selection +or type selection. + +The selection $e.x$ is evaluated by first evaluating the qualifier +expression $e$. The selection's result is then the value to which the +selector identifier is bound in the object resulting from evaluation of $e$. + +\section{This and Super} +\label{sec:this-super} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + SimpleExpr ::= [id `.'] this + | [id `.'] super [`[' id `]'] `.' id +\end{lstlisting} + +The expression \code{this} can appear in the statement part of a +template or compound type. It stands for the object being defined by +the innermost template or compound type enclosing the reference. If +this is a compound type, the type of \code{this} is that compound type. +If it is a template of an instance creation expression, the type of +\code{this} is the type of that template. If it is a template of a +class or object definition with simple name $C$, the type of this +is the same as the type of \lstinline@$C$.this@. + +The expression \lstinline@$C$.this@ is legal in the statement part of an +enclosing class or object definition with simple name $C$. It +stands for the object being defined by the innermost such definition. +If the expression's expected type is a singleton type, or +\lstinline@$C$.this@ occurs as the prefix of a selection, its type is +\lstinline@$C$.this.type@, otherwise it is the self type of class $C$. + +A reference \lstinline@super.$m$@ in a template refers to the +definition of $m$ in the actual superclass (\sref{sec:base-classes}) +of the template. A reference \lstinline@$C$.super.$m$@ refers to the +definition of $m$ in the actual superclass of the innermost enclosing +class or object definition named $C$ which encloses the reference. The +definition $m$ referred to via \code{super} or \lstinline@$C$.super@ +must be concrete, or the template containing the reference must have an +incomplete (\sref{sec:modifiers}) member $m'$ which overrides $m$. + +The \code{super} prefix may be followed by a mixin qualifier +\lstinline@[$M\,$]@, as in \lstinline@$C$.super[$M\,$].$x$@. This is called a {\em mixin +super reference}. In this case, the reference is to the member of +$x$ in the (first) mixin class of $C$ whose simple name +is $M$. That member may not be abstract. + +\example\label{ex:super} +Consider the following class definitions + +\begin{lstlisting} +class Root { val x = "Root" } +class A extends Root { override val x = "A" ; val superA = super.x } +class B extends Root { override val x = "B" ; val superB = super.x } +class C extends A with B { + override val x = "C" ; val superC = super.x +} +class D extends A { val superD = super.x } +class E extends C with D { val superE = super.x } +\end{lstlisting} +Then we have: +\begin{lstlisting} +(new A).superA == "Root", (new B).superB == "Root" +(new C).superA == "Root", (new C).superB == "A", (new C).superC == "A" +(new D).superA == "Root", (new D).superD == "A" +(new E).superA == "Root", (new E).superB == "A", (new E).superC == "A", + (new E).superD == "C", (new E).superE == "C" +\end{lstlisting} +Note that the \code{superB} function returns different results +depending on whether \code{B} is used as defining class or as a mixin class. + +\example Consider the following class definitions: +\begin{lstlisting} +class Shape { + override def equals(other: Any) = $\ldots$; + $\ldots$ +} +trait Bordered extends Shape { + val thickness: int; + override def equals(other: Any) = other match { + case that: Bordered => + super equals other && this.thickness == that.thickness + case _ => false + } + $\ldots$ +} +trait Colored extends Shape { + val color: Color; + override def equals(other: Any) = other match { + case that: Colored => + super equals other && this.color == that.color + case _ => false + } + $\ldots$ +} +\end{lstlisting} + +Both definitions of \code{equals} are combined in the class +below. +\begin{lstlisting} +trait BorderedColoredShape extends Shape with Bordered with Colored { + override def equals(other: Any) = + super[Bordered].equals(that) && super[Colored].equals(that) +} +\end{lstlisting} + +\section{Function Applications} +\label{sec:apply} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + SimpleExpr ::= SimpleExpr ArgumentExprs +\end{lstlisting} + +An application \lstinline@$f$($e_1 \commadots e_n$)@ applies the function $f$ to the +argument expressions $e_1 \commadots e_n$. If $f$ has a method type +\lstinline@($T_1 \commadots T_n$)U@, the type of each argument +expression $e_i$ must conform to the corresponding parameter type +$T_i$. If $f$ has some value type, the application is taken to be +equivalent to \lstinline@$f$.apply($e_1 \commadots e_n$)@, i.e.\ the +application of an \code{apply} method defined by $f$. + +%Class constructor functions +%(\sref{sec:classes}) can only be applied in constructor invocations +%(\sref{sec:constr-invoke}), never in expressions. + +Evaluation of \lstinline@$f$($e_1 \commadots e_n$)@ usually entails evaluation of +$f$ and $e_1 \commadots e_n$ in that order. Each argument expression +is converted to the type of its corresponding formal parameter. After +that, the application is rewritten to the function's right hand side, +with actual arguments substituted for formal parameters. The result +of evaluating the rewritten right-hand side is finally converted to +the function's declared result type, if one is given. + +The case of a formal \code{def}-parameter with a parameterless +method type \lstinline@[]$T$@ is treated specially. In this case, the +corresponding actual argument expression is not evaluated before the +application. Instead, every use of the formal parameter on the +right-hand side of the rewrite rule entails a re-evaluation of the +actual argument expression. In other words, the evaluation order for +\code{def}-parameters is {\em call-by-name} whereas the evaluation +order for normal parameters is {\em call-by-value}. + +\section{Type Applications} +\label{sec:type-app} +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + SimpleExpr ::= SimpleExpr `[' Types `]' +\end{lstlisting} + +A type application \lstinline@$e$[$T_1 \commadots T_n$]@ instantiates a +polymorphic value $e$ of type +~\lstinline@[$a_1$ >: $L_1$ <: $U_1 \commadots a_n$ >: $L_n$ <: $U_n$]S@~ with +argument types \lstinline@$T_1 \commadots T_n$@. Every argument type +$T_i$ must obey corresponding bounds $L_i$ and +$U_i$. That is, for each $i = 1 \commadots n$, we must +have $L_i \sigma \conforms T_i \conforms U_i \sigma$, where $\sigma$ is the +substitution $[a_1 := T_1 \commadots a_n := T_n]$. The type +of the application is \lstinline@S$\sigma$@. + +The function part $e$ may also have some value type. In this case +the type application is taken to be equivalent to +~\lstinline@$e$.apply[$T_1 \commadots$ T$_n$]@, i.e.\ the +application of an \code{apply} method defined by $e$. + +Type applications can be omitted if local type inference +(\sref{sec:local-type-inf}) can infer best type parameters for a +polymorphic functions from the types of the actual function arguments +and the expected result type. + +\section{References to Overloaded Bindings} +\label{sec:overloaded-refs} + +If a name $f$ referenced in an identifier or selection is +overloaded (\sref{sec:overloaded-defs}), the context of the reference +has to identify a unique alternative of the overloaded binding. The +way this is done depends on whether or not $f$ is used as a +function. Let $\AA$ be the set of all type alternatives of +$f$. + +Assume first that $f$ appears as a function in an application, as +in \lstinline@$f$($\args\,$)@. If there is precisely one alternative in +$\AA$ which is a (possibly polymorphic) method type whose arity +matches the number of arguments given, that alternative is chosen. + +Otherwise, let $\argtypes$ be the vector of types obtained by +typing each argument with a missing expected type. One determines +first the set of applicable alternatives. A method type alternative is +{\em applicable} if each type in $\argtypes$ is compatible with +the corresponding formal parameter type in the alternative, and, if +the expected type is defined, the method's result type is compatible to +it. A polymorphic method type is applicable if local type inference +can determine type arguments so that the instantiated method type is +applicable. + +Here, a type $T$ is {\em compatible} to a type $U$ if $T$ +conforms to $U$ after applying implicit conversions +(\sref{sec:impl-conv}). + +Let $\BB$ be the set of applicable alternatives. It is an error if +$\BB$ is empty. Otherwise, one chooses the {\em most specific} +alternative among the alternatives in $\BB$, according to the +following definition of being ``more specific''. +\begin{itemize} +\item +A method type \lstinline@($\Ts\,$)$U$@ is more specific than some other +type $S$ if $S$ is applicable to arguments \lstinline@($ps\,$)@ of +types $\Ts$. +\item +A polymorphic method type +~\lstinline@[$a_1$ >: $L_1$ <: $U_1 \commadots a_n$ >: $L_n$ <: $U_n$]T@~ is +more specific than some other type $S$ if $T$ is more +specific than $S$ under the assumption that for +$i = 1 \commadots n$ each $a_i$ is an abstract type name +bounded from below by $L_i$ and from above by $U_i$. +\item +Any other type is always more specific than a parameterized method +type or a polymorphic type. +\end{itemize} +It is an error if there is no unique alternative in $\BB$ which is +more specific than all other alternatives in $\BB$. + +Assume next that $f$ appears as a function in a type +application, as in \lstinline@$f$[$\targs\,$]@. Then we choose an alternative in +$\AA$ which takes the same number of type parameters as there are +type arguments in $\targs$. It is an error if no such alternative +exists, or if it is not unique. + +Assume finally that $f$ does not appear as a function in either +an application or a type application. If an expected type is given, +let $\BB$ be the set of those alternatives in $\AA$ which are +compatible to it. Otherwise, let $\BB$ be the same as $\AA$. +We choose in this case the most specific alternative among all +alternatives in $\BB$. It is an error if there is no unique +alternative in $\BB$ which is more specific than all other +alternatives in $\BB$. + +\example Consider the following definitions: + +\begin{lstlisting} + class A extends B {} + def f(x: B, y: B) = $\ldots$ + def f(x: A, y: B) = $\ldots$ + val a: A, b: B +\end{lstlisting} +Then the application \lstinline@f(b, b)@ refers to the first +definition of $f$ whereas the application \lstinline@f(a, a)@ +refers to the second. Assume now we add a third overloaded definition +\begin{lstlisting} + def f(x: B, y: A) = $\ldots$ +\end{lstlisting} +Then the application \lstinline@f(a, a)@ is rejected for being ambiguous, since +no most specific applicable signature exists. + +\section{Instance Creation Expressions} +\label{sec:inst-creation} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + SimpleExpr ::= new Template +\end{lstlisting} + +A simple instance creation expression is of the form ~\lstinline@new $c$@~ +where $c$ is a constructor invocation +(\sref{sec:constr-invoke}). Let $T$ be the type of $c$. Then $T$ must +denote a (a type instance of) a non-abstract subclass of +\lstinline@scala.AnyRef@ which conforms to its self type +(\sref{sec:classes}). The expression is evaluated by creating a fresh +object of type $T$ which is is initialized by evaluating $c$. The +type of the expression is $T$'s self type (which might be less +specific than $T\,$). + +A general instance creation expression is of the form +\begin{lstlisting} +new $sc$ with $mc_1$ with $\ldots$ with $mc_n$ {$\stats\,$} +\end{lstlisting} +where $n \geq 0$, $sc$ as well as $mc_1 \commadots mc_n$ are +constructor invocations (of types $S, T_1 \commadots T_n$, say) and +$\stats$ is a statement sequence containing initializer statements and +member definitions (\sref{sec:members}). The type of such an instance +creation expression is then the compound type +\lstinline@$S$ with $T_1$ with $\ldots$ with $T_n$ {$R\,$}@, +where \lstinline@{$R\,$}@ is +a refinement (\sref{sec:compound-types}) which declares exactly those +members of $\stats$ that override a member of $S$ or $T_1 \commadots +T_n$. \todo{what about methods and overloaded defs?} For this type to +be well-formed, $R$ may not reference types defined in $\stats$ which +do not themselves form part of $R$. + +The instance creation expression is evaluated by creating a fresh +object, which is initialized by evaluating the expression template. + +\example Consider the class +\begin{lstlisting} +abstract class C { + type T; val x: T; def f(x: T): AnyRef +} +\end{lstlisting} +and the instance creation expression +\begin{lstlisting} +C { type T = Int; val x: T = 1; def f(x: T): T = y; val y: T = 2 } +\end{lstlisting} +Then the created object's type is: +\begin{lstlisting} +C { type T = Int; val x: T; def f(x: T): T } +\end{lstlisting} +The value $y$ is missing from the type, since $y$ does not +override a member of $C$. + +\section{Blocks} +\label{sec:blocks} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + BlockExpr ::= `{' Block `}' + Block ::= [{BlockStat `;'} ResultExpr] +\end{lstlisting} + +A block expression ~\lstinline@{$s_1$; $\ldots$; $s_n$; $e\,$}@~ is constructed from a +sequence of block statements $s_1 \commadots s_n$ and a final +expression $e$. The final expression can be omitted, in which +case the unit value \lstinline@()@ is assumed. + +%Whether or not the scope includes the statement itself +%depends on the kind of definition. + +The expected type of the final expression $e$ is the expected +type of the block. The expected type of all preceding statements is +missing. + +The type of a block ~\lstinline@$s_1$; $\ldots$; $s_n$; $e$@~ is usually the type of +$e$. That type must be equivalent to a type which does not refer +to an entity defined locally in the block. If this condition is +violated, but a fully defined expected type is given, the type of the +block is instead assumed to be the expected type. + +Evaluation of the block entails evaluation of its statement sequence, +followed by an evaluation of the final expression $e$, which +defines the result of the block. + +\example +Written in isolation, +the block +\begin{lstlisting} +{ class C extends B {$\ldots$} ; new C } +\end{lstlisting} +is illegal, since its type +refers to class $C$, which is defined locally in the block. + +However, when used in a definition such as +\begin{lstlisting} +val x: B = { class C extends B {$\ldots$} ; new C } +\end{lstlisting} +the block is well-formed, since the problematic type $C$ can be +replaced by the expected type $B$. + +\section{Prefix, Infix, and Postfix Operations} +\label{sec:infix-operations} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + PostfixExpr ::= InfixExpr [id] + InfixExpr ::= PrefixExpr + | InfixExpr id PrefixExpr + PrefixExpr ::= [`-' | `+' | `!' | `~'] SimpleExpr +\end{lstlisting} + +Expressions can be constructed from operands and operators. A prefix +operation $op;e$ consists of a prefix operator $op$, which +must be one of the identifiers `\lstinline@+@', `\lstinline@-@', `\lstinline@!@', or +`\lstinline@~@', and a simple expression $e$. The expression is +equivalent to the postfix method application $e.op$. + +Prefix operators are different from normal function applications in +that their operand expression need not be atomic. For instance, the +input sequence \lstinline@-sin(x)@ is read as \lstinline@-(sin(x))@, whereas the +function application \lstinline@negate sin(x)@ would be parsed as the +application of the infix operator \code{sin} to the operands +\code{negate} and \lstinline@(x)@. + +An infix or postfix operator can be an arbitrary identifier. Infix +operators have precedence and associativity defined as follows: + +The {\em precedence} of an infix operator is determined by the operator's first +character. Characters are listed below in increasing order of +precedence, with characters on the same line having the same precedence. +\begin{lstlisting} + $\mbox{\rm\sl(all letters)}$ + | + ^ + & + < > + = ! + : + + - + * / % + $\mbox{\rm\sl(all other special characters)}$ +\end{lstlisting} +That is, operators starting with a letter have lowest precedence, +followed by operators starting with `\lstinline@|@', etc. + +The {\em associativity} of an operator is determined by the operator's +last character. Operators ending with a colon `\lstinline@:@' are +right-associative. All other operators are left-associative. + +Precedence and associativity of operators determine the grouping of +parts of an expression as follows. +\begin{itemize} +\item If there are several infix operations in an +expression, then operators with higher precedence bind more closely +than operators with lower precedence. +\item If there are consecutive infix +operations $e_0; \op_1; e_1; \op_2 \ldots \op_n; e_n$ +with operators $\op_1 \commadots \op_n$ of the same precedence, +then all these operators must +have the same associativity. If all operators are left-associative, +the sequence is interpreted as +$(\ldots(e_0;\op_1;e_1);\op_2\ldots);\op_n;e_n$. +Otherwise, if all operators are right-associative, the +sequence is interpreted as +$e_0;\op_1;(e_1;\op_2;(\ldots \op_n;e_n)\ldots)$. +\item +Postfix operators always have lower precedence than infix +operators. E.g.\ $e_1;\op_1;e_2;\op_2$ is always equivalent to +$(e_1;\op_1;e_2);\op_2$. +\end{itemize} +A postfix operation $e;\op$ is interpreted as $e.\op$. A +left-associative binary operation $e_1;\op;e_2$ is interpreted as +$e_1.\op(e_2)$. If $\op$ is right-associative, the same operation is +interpreted as ~\lstinline@(val $x$=$e_1$; $e_2$.$\op$($x\,$))@, +where $x$ is a fresh name. + +\section{Typed Expressions} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + Expr1 ::= PostfixExpr [`:' Type1] +\end{lstlisting} + +The typed expression $e: T$ has type $T$. The type of +expression $e$ is expected to conform to $T$. The result of +the expression is the value of $e$ converted to type $T$. + +\example Here are examples of well-typed and illegally typed expressions. + +\begin{lstlisting} + 1: int // legal, of type int + 1: long // legal, of type long + // 1: string // illegal +\end{lstlisting} + +\section{Assignments} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + Expr1 ::= Designator `=' Expr + | SimpleExpr ArgumentExprs `=' Expr +\end{lstlisting} + +The interpretation of an assignment to a simple variable ~\lstinline@$x$ = $e$@~ +depends on the definition of $x$. If $x$ denotes a mutable +variable, then the assignment changes the current value of $x$ to be +the result of evaluating the expression $e$. The type of $e$ is +expected to conform to the type of $x$. If $x$ is a parameterless +function defined in some template, and the same template contains a +setter function \lstinline@$x$_=@ as member, then the assignment +~\lstinline@$x$ = $e$@~ is interpreted as the invocation +~\lstinline@$x$_=($e\,$)@~ of that setter function. Analogously, an +assignment ~\lstinline@$f.x$ = $e$@~ to a parameterless function $x$ +is interpreted as the invocation ~\lstinline@$f.x$_=($e\,$)@. + +An assignment ~\lstinline@$f$($\args\,$) = $e$@~ with a function application to the +left of the ``\lstinline@=@' operator is interpreted as +~\lstinline@$f.$update($\args$, $e\,$)@, i.e.\ +the invocation of an \code{update} function defined by $f$. + +\example \label{ex:imp-mat-mul} +Here is the usual imperative code for matrix multiplication. + +\begin{lstlisting} +def matmul(xss: Array[Array[double]], yss: Array[Array[double]]) = { + val zss: Array[Array[double]] = new Array(xss.length, yss.length); + var i = 0; + while (i < xss.length) { + var j = 0; + while (j < yss(0).length) { + var acc = 0.0; + var k = 0; + while (k < yss.length) { + acc = acc + xs(i)(k) * yss(k)(j); + k = k + 1 + } + zss(i)(j) = acc; + j = j + 1 + } + i = i + 1 + } + zss +} +\end{lstlisting} +Desugaring the array accesses and assignments yields the following +expanded version: +\begin{lstlisting} +def matmul(xss: Array[Array[double]], yss: Array[Array[double]]) = { + val zss: Array[Array[double]] = new Array(xss.length, yss.length); + var i = 0; + while (i < xss.length) { + var j = 0; + while (j < yss(0).length) { + var acc = 0.0; + var k = 0; + while (k < yss.length) { + acc = acc + xss.apply(i).apply(k) * yss.apply(k).apply(j); + k = k + 1 + } + zss.apply(i).update(j, acc); + j = j + 1 + } + i = i + 1 + } + zss +} +\end{lstlisting} + +\section{Conditional Expressions} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + Expr1 ::= if `(' Expr `)' Expr [[`;'] else Expr] +\end{lstlisting} + +The conditional expression ~\lstinline@if ($e_1$) $e_2$ else $e_3$@~ chooses +one of the values of $e_2$ and $e_3$, depending on the +value of $e_1$. The condition $e_1$ is expected to +conform to type \code{boolean}. The then-part $e_2$ and the +else-part $e_3$ are both expected to conform to the expected +type of the conditional expression. The type of the conditional +expression is the least upper bound of the types of $e_1$ and +$e_2$. A semicolon preceding the \code{else} symbol of a +conditional expression is ignored. + +The conditional expression is evaluated by evaluating first +$e_1$. If this evaluates to \code{true}, the result of +evaluating $e_2$ is returned, otherwise the result of +evaluating $e_3$ is returned. + +A short form of the conditional expression eliminates the +else-part. The conditional expression ~\lstinline@if ($e_1$) $e_2$@~ is +evaluated as if it was ~\lstinline@if ($e_1$) $e_2$ else ()@. The type of +this expression is \code{unit} and the then-part +$e_2$ is also expected to conform to type \code{unit}. + +\section{While Loop Expressions} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + Expr1 ::= while `(' Expr ')' Expr +\end{lstlisting} + +The while loop expression ~\lstinline@while ($e_1$) $e_2$@~ is typed and +evaluated as if it was an application of ~\lstinline@whileLoop ($e_1$) ($e_2$)@~ where +the hypothetical function \code{whileLoop} is defined as follows. + +\begin{lstlisting} + def whileLoop(def c: boolean)(def s: unit): unit = + if (c) { s ; while(c)(s) } else {} +\end{lstlisting} + +\example The loop +\begin{lstlisting} + while (x != 0) { y = y + 1/x ; x = x - 1 } +\end{lstlisting} +Is equivalent to the application +\begin{lstlisting} + whileLoop (x != 0) { y = y + 1/x ; x = x - 1 } +\end{lstlisting} +Note that this application will never produce a division-by-zero +error at run-time, since the +expression ~\lstinline@(y = 1/x)@~ will be evaluated in the body of +\code{while} only if the condition parameter is false. + +\section{Do Loop Expressions} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + Expr1 ::= do Expr [`;'] while `(' Expr ')' +\end{lstlisting} + +The do loop expression ~\lstinline@do $e_1$ while ($e_2$)@~ is typed and +evaluated as if it was the expression ~\lstinline@($e_1$ ; while ($e_2$) $e_1$)@. +A semicolon preceding the \code{while} symbol of a do loop expression is ignored. + +\section{Comprehensions} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + Expr1 ::= for `(' Enumerators `)' [yield] Expr + Enumerator ::= Generator {`;' Enumerator} + Enumerator ::= Generator + | Expr + Generator ::= val Pattern1 `<-' Expr +\end{lstlisting} + +A comprehension ~\lstinline@for ($\enums\,$) yield $e$@~ evaluates +expression $e$ for each binding generated by the enumerators +$\enums$. Enumerators start with a generator, which can be followed by +further generators or filters. A {\em generator} +~\lstinline@val $p$ <- $e$@~ +produces bindings from an expression $e$ which is matched in +some way against pattern $p$. A {\em filter} is an expressions which restricts +enumerated bindings. The precise meaning of generators and filters is +defined by translation to invocations of four methods: \code{map}, +\code{filter}, \code{flatMap}, and \code{foreach}. These methods can +be implemented in different ways for different carrier types. +\comment{As an +example, an implementation of these methods for lists is given in +\sref{cls-list}.} + +The translation scheme is as follows. +In a first step, every generator ~\lstinline@val $p$ <- $e$@, where $p$ is not +a pattern variable, is replaced by +\begin{lstlisting} +val $p$ <- $e$.filter { case $p$ => true; case _ => false } +\end{lstlisting} +Then, the following +rules are applied repeatedly until all comprehensions have been eliminated. +\begin{itemize} +\item +A generator ~\lstinline@val $p$ <- $e$@~ followed by a filter $f$ is translated to +a single generator ~\lstinline@val $p$ <- $e$.filter($x_1 \commadots x_n$ => $f\,$)@~ where +$x_1 \commadots x_n$ are the free variables of $p$. + +\item +A for-comprehension +~\lstinline@for (val $p$ <- $e\,$) yield $e'$@~ +is translated to +~\lstinline@$e$.map { case $p$ => $e'$ }@. + +\item +A for-comprehension +~\lstinline@for (val $p$ <- $e\,$) $e'$@~ +is translated to +~\lstinline@$e$.foreach { case $p$ => $e'$ }@. + +\item +A for-comprehension +\begin{lstlisting} +for (val $p$ <- $e$; val $p'$ <- $e'; \ldots$) yield $e''$ , +\end{lstlisting} +where \lstinline@$\ldots$@ is a (possibly empty) +sequence of generators or filters, +is translated to +\begin{lstlisting} +$e$.flatmap { case $p$ => for (val $p'$ <- $e'; \ldots$) yield $e''$ } . +\end{lstlisting} +\item +A for-comprehension +\begin{lstlisting} +for (val $p$ <- $e$; val $p'$ <- $e'; \ldots$) $e''$ . +\end{lstlisting} +where \lstinline@$\ldots$@ is a (possibly empty) +sequence of generators or filters, +is translated to +\begin{lstlisting} +$e$.foreach { case $p$ => for (val $p'$ <- $e'; \ldots$) $e''$ } . +\end{lstlisting} +\end{itemize} + +\example +the following code produces all pairs of numbers +between $1$ and $n-1$ whose sums are prime. +\begin{lstlisting} +for { val i <- range(1, n); + val j <- range(1, i); + isPrime(i+j) +} yield Pair (i, j) +\end{lstlisting} +The for-comprehension is translated to: +\begin{lstlisting} +range(1, n) + .flatMap { + case i => range(1, i) + .filter { j => isPrime(i+j) } + .map { case j => Pair(i, j) } } +\end{lstlisting} + +\comment{ +\example +\begin{lstlisting} +package class List[a] { + def map[b](f: (a)b): List[b] = match { + case <> => <> + case x :: xs => f(x) :: xs.map(f) + } + def filter(p: (a)Boolean) = match { + case <> => <> + case x :: xs => if p(x) then x :: xs.filter(p) else xs.filter(p) + } + def flatMap[b](f: (a)List[b]): List[b] = + if (isEmpty) Nil + else f(head) ::: tail.flatMap(f); + def foreach(f: (a)Unit): Unit = + if (isEmpty) () + else (f(head); tail.foreach(f)); +} +\end{lstlisting} + +\example +\begin{lstlisting} +abstract class Graph[Node] { + type Edge = (Node, Node) + val nodes: List[Node] + val edges: List[Edge] + def succs(n: Node) = for ((p, s) <- g.edges, p == n) s + def preds(n: Node) = for ((p, s) <- g.edges, s == n) p +} +def topsort[Node](g: Graph[Node]): List[Node] = { + val sources = for (n <- g.nodes, g.preds(n) == <>) n + if (g.nodes.isEmpty) <> + else if (sources.isEmpty) new Error(``topsort of cyclic graph'') throw + else sources :+: topsort(new Graph[Node] { + val nodes = g.nodes diff sources + val edges = for ((p, s) <- g.edges, !(sources contains p)) (p, s) + }) +} +\end{lstlisting} +} + +\example For comprehensions can be used to express vector +and matrix algorithms concisely. +For instance, here is a function to compute the transpose of a given matrix: + +\begin{lstlisting} +def transpose[a](xss: Array[Array[a]]) { + for (val i <- Array.range(0, xss(0).length)) yield + Array(for (val xs <- xss) yield xs(i)) +\end{lstlisting} + +Here is a function to compute the scalar product of two vectors: +\begin{lstlisting} +def scalprod(xs: Array[double], ys: Array[double]) { + var acc = 0.0; + for (val Pair(x, y) <- xs zip ys) acc = acc + x * y; + acc +} +\end{lstlisting} + +Finally, here is a function to compute the product of two matrices. Compare with the imperative version of \ref{ex:imp-mat-mul}. +\begin{lstlisting} +def matmul(xss: Array[Array[double]], yss: Array[Array[double]]) = { + val ysst = transpose(yss); + for (val xs <- xs) yield + for (val yst <- ysst) yield + scalprod(xs, yst) +} +\end{lstlisting} +The code above makes use of the fact that \code{map}, \code{flatmap}, +\code{filter}, and \code{foreach} are defined for members of class +\lstinline@scala.Array@. + +\section{Return Expressions} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + Expr1 ::= return [Expr] +\end{lstlisting} + +A return expression ~\lstinline@return $e$@~ must occur inside the +body of some enclosing named method or function $f$. This function +must have an explicitly declared result type, and the type of $e$ must +conform to it. The return expression evaluates the expression $e$ and +returns its value as the result of $f$. The evaluation of any statements or +expressions following the return expression is omitted. The type of +a return expression is \code{scala.All}. + + + +\section{Throw Expressions} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + Expr1 ::= throw Expr +\end{lstlisting} + +A throw expression ~\lstinline@throw $e$@~ evaluates the expression +$e$. The type of this expression must conform to +\code{Throwable}. If $e$ evaluates to an exception +reference, evaluation is aborted with the thrown exception. If $e$ +evaluates to \code{null}, evaluation is instead aborted with a +\code{NullPointerException}. If there is an active +\code{try} expression (\sref{sec:try}) which handles the thrown +exception, evaluation resumes with the handler; otherwise the thread +executing the \code{throw} is aborted. The type of a throw expression +is \code{scala.All}. + +\section{Try Expressions}\label{sec:try} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + Expr1 ::= try `{' Block `}' [catch Expr] [finally Expr] +\end{lstlisting} + +A try expression ~\lstinline@try { $b$ } catch $e$@~ evaluates the block +$b$. If evaluation of $b$ does not cause an exception to be +thrown, the result of $b$ is returned. Otherwise the {\em +handler} $e$ is applied to the thrown exception. Let $\proto$ +be the expected type of the try expression. The block $b$ is +expected to conform to $\proto$. The handler $e$ is expected +conform to type ~\lstinline@scala.PartialFunction[scala.Throwable, $\proto\,$]@. +The type of the try expression is the least upper bound of the type of +$b$ and the result type of $e$. + +A try expression ~\lstinline@try { $b$ } finally $e$@~ evaluates the block +$b$. If evaluation of $b$ does not cause an exception to be +thrown, the expression $e$ is evaluated. If an exception is thrown +during evaluation of $e$, the evaluation of the try expression is +aborted with the thrown exception. If no exception is thrown during +evaluation of $e$, the result of $b$ is returned as the +result of the try expression. + +If an exception is thrown during +evaluation of $b$, the finally block +$e$ is also evaluated. If another exception $e$ is thrown +during evaluation of $e$, evaluation of the try expression is +aborted with the thrown exception. If no exception is thrown during +evaluation of $e$, the original exception thrown in $b$ is +re-thrown once evaluation of $e$ has completed. The block +$b$ is expected to conform to the expected type of the try +expression. The finally expression $e$ is expected to conform to +type \code{unit}. + +A try expression ~\lstinline@try { $b$ } catch $e_1$ finally $e_2$@~ is a shorthand +for ~\lstinline@try { try { $b$ } catch $e_1$ } finally $e_2$@. + + + + +\section{Anonymous Functions} +\label{sec:closures} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + Expr1 ::= Bindings `=>' Expr + ResultExpr ::= Bindings `=>' Block + Bindings ::= `(' Binding {`,' Binding `)' + | id [`:' Type1] + Binding ::= id [`:' Type] +\end{lstlisting} + +The anonymous function ~\lstinline@($x_1$: $T_1 \commadots x_n$: $T_n$) => e@~ +maps parameters $x_i$ of types $T_i$ to a result given +by expression $e$. The scope of each formal parameter +$x_i$ is $e$. Formal parameters must have pairwise distinct names. + +If the expected type of the anonymous function is of the form +~\lstinline@scala.Function$n$[$S_1 \commadots S_n$, $R\,$]@, the +expected type of $e$ is $R$ and the type $T_i$ of any of the +parameters $x_i$ can be omitted, in which +case~\lstinline@$T_i$ = $S_i$@ is assumed. +If the expected type of the anonymous function is +some other type, all formal parameter types must be explicitly given, +and the expected type of $e$ is missing. The type of the anonymous +function +is~\lstinline@scala.Function$n$[$S_1 \commadots S_n$, $T\,$]@, +where $T$ is the type of $e$. $T$ must be equivalent to a +type which does not refer to any of the formal parameters $x_i$. + +The anonymous function is evaluated as the instance creation expression +\begin{lstlisting} +scala.Function$n$[$T_1 \commadots T_n$, $T$] { + def apply($x_1$: $T_1 \commadots x_n$: $T_n$): $T$ = $e$ +} +\end{lstlisting} +In the case of a single formal parameter, ~\lstinline@($x$: $T\,$) => $e$@~ and ~\lstinline@($x\,$) => $e$@~ +can be abbreviated to ~\lstinline@$x$: $T$ => e@, and ~\lstinline@$x$ => $e$@, respectively. + +\example Examples of anonymous functions: + +\begin{lstlisting} + x => x // The identity function + + f => g => x => f(g(x)) // Curried function composition + + (x: Int,y: Int) => x + y // A summation function + + () => { count = count + 1; count } // The function which takes an + // empty parameter list $()$, + // increments a non-local variable + // `count' and returns the new value. +\end{lstlisting} + +\section{Statements} +\label{sec:statements} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + BlockStat ::= Import + | Def + | {LocalModifier} ClsDef + | Expr + | + TemplateStat ::= Import + | {Modifier} Def + | {Modifier} Dcl + | Expr + | +\end{lstlisting} + +Statements occur as parts of blocks and templates. A statement can be +an import, a definition or an expression, or it can be empty. +Statements used in the template of a class definition can also be +declarations. An expression that is used as a statement can have an +arbitrary value type. An expression statement $e$ is evaluated by +evaluating $e$ and discarding the result of the evaluation. +\todo{Generalize to implicit coercion?} + +Block statements may be definitions which bind local names in the +block. The only modifiers allowed in block-local definitions are modifiers +\code{abstract}, \code{final}, or \code{sealed} preceding a class or +object definition. + +With the exception of overloaded definitions +(\sref{sec:overloaded-defs}), a statement sequence making up a block +or template may not contain two definitions or declarations that bind +the same name in the same namespace. Evaluation of a statement +sequence entails evaluation of the statements in the order they are +written. + +\chapter{Pattern Matching} + +\section{Patterns} + +% 2003 July - changed to new pattern syntax + semantic Burak +% Nov - incorporated changes to grammar, avoiding empty patterns +% definitions for value and sequence patterns +\label{sec:patterns} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + Pattern ::= Pattern1 { `|' Pattern1 } + Pattern1 ::= varid `:' Type + | `_' `:' Type + | Pattern2 + Pattern2 ::= [varid `@'] Pattern3 + Pattern3 ::= SimplePattern [ '*' | '?' | '+' ] + | SimplePattern { id' SimplePattern } + SimplePattern ::= `_' + | varid + | Literal + | StableId [ `(' [Patterns] `)' ] + | `(' [Patterns] `)' + Patterns ::= Pattern {`,' Pattern} + id' ::= id $\textit{ but not }$ '*' | '?' | '+' | `@' | `|' +\end{lstlisting} + +A pattern is built from constants, constructors, variables and regular +operators. Pattern matching tests whether a given value (or sequence +of values) has the shape defined by a pattern, and, if it does, binds +the variables in the pattern to the corresponding components of the +value (or sequence of values). The same variable name may not be +bound more than once in a pattern. + +\subsection{Value and Sequence Patterns} + +\todo{Need to distinguish between value and sequence patterns at the outside} + +On an abstract level, we distinguish between value patterns and sequence patterns, which are defined in a +mutually inductive manner. A {\em value pattern} describes a set of matching values. A +{\em sequence pattern} describes a set of matching of sequences of values. Both sorts of patterns may +contain {\em variable bindings} which serve to extract constituents of a value or sequence, +and may consist of patterns of the respective other sort. + +The type of a patterns and the expected types of variables +within patterns are determined by the context. + +Concretely, we distinguish the following kinds of patterns. + +A {\em wild-card pattern} \_ matches any value. + +A {\em typed pattern} $\_: T$ matches values of type $T$. The type $T$ may be + a class type or a compound type; it may not contain a refinement (\sref{sec:refinements}). +This pattern matches any non-null value of type $T$. $T$ must conform to the pattern's expected +type. A pattern $x:T$ is treated the same way as $x @ (\_:T)$ + +A {\em pattern literal} $l$ matches any value that is equal (in terms +of $==$) to it. It's type must conform to the expected type of the +pattern. + +A {\em named pattern constant} $p$ is a stable identifier +(\sref{sec:stable-ids}). To resolve the syntactic overlap with a +variable pattern, a named pattern constant may not be a simple name +starting with a lower-case letter. The stable identifier $p$ is +expected to conform to the expected type of the pattern. The pattern +matches any value $v$ such that ~\lstinline@$r$ == $v$@~ +(\sref{sec:cls-object}). + +A {\em sequence pattern} $p_1 \commadots p_n$ where $n \geq 0$ is a +sequence of patterns separated by commas and matching the sequence of +values that are matched by the components. Sequence patterns may only +appear under constructor applications, or nested within a another sequence pattern. +Note that empty sequence patterns are allowed. The type of value patterns that appear in +a sequence pattern is the expected type as determined from the constructor. +A {\em fixed-length argument pattern} is a special sequence pattern where +where all $p_i$ are value patterns. + +A {\em choice pattern} $p_1 | \ldots | p_n$ is a choice among several +alternatives, which may not contain variable-binding patterns. It +matches every value and every sequence matched by at least one of its alternatives. +Note that the empty sequence may appear as an alternative. An {\em option +pattern} $p?$ is an abbreviation for $(p| )$. A choice is a value pattern if all its branches +are value patterns. In this case, all branches must conform to the expected type and the type +of the choice is the least upper bound of the branches. Otherwise, it has the same type as the +sequence pattern it is part of. + +An {\em iterated pattern} $p*$ matches sequences of values +consisting of zero, one or more occurrences of values matched by $p$, +where $p$ may not contain a variable-binding pattern. A {\em non-empty +iterated pattern} $p+$ is an abbreviation for $(p,p*)$. + +A {\em constructor pattern} $c ( p )$ consists of a simple type $c$ +followed by a pattern $p$. If $c$ designates a monomorphic case +class, then it must conform to the expected type of the pattern, the +pattern must be a fixed length argument pattern $p_1 \commadots p_n$ +whose length corresponds to the number of arguments of $c$'s primary +constructor. The expected types of the component patterns are then +taken from the formal parameter types of (said) constructor. If $c$ +designates a polymorphic case class, then there must be a unique type +application instance of it such that the instantiation of $c$ conforms +to the expected type of the pattern. The instantiated formal parameter +types of $c$'s primary constructor are then taken as the expected +types of the component patterns $p_1\commadots p_n$. In both cases, +the pattern matches all objects created from constructor invocations +$c(v_1 \commadots v_n)$ where each component pattern $p_i$ matches the +corresponding value $v_i$. If $c$ does not designate a case class, it +must be a subclass of \lstinline@Seq[$T\,$]@. In that case $p$ may be an +arbitrary sequence pattern. Value patterns in $p$ are expected to conform to +type $T$, and the pattern matches all objects whose \lstinline@elements()@ +method returns a sequence that matches $p$. + +The pattern $(p)$ is regarded as equivalent to the pattern $p$, if $p$ +is a nonempty sequence pattern. The empty tuple $()$ is a shorthand +for the constructor pattern \code{Unit}. + +An {\em infix operation pattern} ~\lstinline@$p$ $op$ $p'$@~ is a shorthand for the +constructor pattern ~\lstinline@$op$($p$, $p'$)@. The precedence and +associativity of operators in patterns is the same as in expressions +(\sref{sec:infix-operations}). The operands may not be empty sequence +patterns. + +\subsection{Variable Binding} + +A {\em variable-binding pattern} $x @ p$ is a simple identifier $x$ +which starts with a lower case letter, together with a pattern $p$. It +matches a value or a sequence of values whenever $p$ does, and in +addition binds the variable name to that value or to that sequence of +values. If $p$ is a value pattern of type $T$, the type of $x$ is also $T$. +If $p$ is a sequence pattern and appears under a constructor $c <: $\lstinline@Seq[$T\,$]@, +then the type of $x$ is \lstinline@List[$T\,$]@. %%\todo{really?} burak:yes +where $T$ is the expected type as dictated by the constructor. A pattern +consisting of only a variable $x$ is treated as the bound value pattern $x @ \_$. + +Regular expressions that contain variable bindings may be ambiguous, +i.e. there might be several ways to match a sequence against the +pattern. In these cases, the \emph{right-longest policy} applies: +patterns that appear more to the right than others in a sequence take precedence in case +of overlaps. + +\example Some examples of patterns are: +\begin{enumerate} +\item +The pattern ~\lstinline@ex: IOException@~ matches all instances of class +\code{IOException}, binding variable \code{ex} to the instance. +\item +The pattern ~\lstinline@Pair(x, _)@~ matches pairs of values, binding \code{x} to +the first component of the pair. The second component is matched +with a wildcard pattern. +\item +The pattern \ \code{List( x, y, xs @ _ * )} matches lists of length $\geq 2$, +binding \code{x} to the list's first element, \code{y} to the list's +second element, and \code{xs} to the remainder, which may be empty. +\item +The pattern \ \code{List( 1, x@(( 'a' | 'b' )+),y,_ )} matches a list that +contains 1 as its first element, continues with a non-empty sequence of +\code{'a'}s and \code{'b'}s, followed by two more elements. The sequence 'a's and 'b's +is bound to \code{x}, and the next to last element is bound to \code{y}. +\item +The pattern \code{List( x@( 'a'* ), 'a'+ )} matches a non-empty list of +\code{'a'}s. Because of the shortest match policy, \code{x} will always be bound to +the empty sequence. +\item +The pattern \code{List( x@( 'a'+ ), 'a'* )} also matches a non-empty list of +\code{'a'}s. Here, \code{x} will always be bound to +the sequence containing one \code{'a'} +\end{enumerate} + +\section{Pattern Matching Expressions} +\label{sec:pattern-match} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + BlockExpr ::= `{' CaseClause {CaseClause} `}' + CaseClause ::= case Pattern [`if' PostfixExpr] `=>' Block +\end{lstlisting} + +A pattern matching expression +~\lstinline@case $p_1$ => $b_1$ $\ldots$ case $p_n$ => $b_n$@ \ consists of a number +$n \geq 1$ of cases. Each case consists of a (possibly guarded) pattern +$p_i$ and a block $b_i$. The scope of the pattern variables in $p_i$ is +the corresponding block $b_i$. + +The expected type of a pattern matching expression must in part be +defined. It must be either ~\lstinline@scala.Function1[$T_p$, $T_r$]@ \ or +~\lstinline@scala.PartialFunction[$T_p$, $T_r$]@, where the argument type +$T_p$ must be fully determined, but the result type +$T_r$ may be undetermined. All patterns are typed +relative to the expected type $T_p$ (\sref{sec:patterns}). The expected type of +every block $b_i$ is $T_r$. +Let $T_b$ be the least upper bound of the types of all blocks +$b_i$. The type of the pattern matching expression is +then the required type with $T_r$ replaced by $T_b$ +(i.e. the type is either ~\lstinline@scala.Function[$T_p$, $T_b$]@~ or +~\lstinline@scala.PartialFunction[$T_p$, $T_b$]@. + +When applying a pattern matching expression to a selector value, +patterns are tried in sequence until one is found which matches the +selector value (\sref{sec:patterns}). Say this case is $\CASE;p_i +\Arrow b_i$. The result of the whole expression is then the result of +evaluating $b_i$, where all pattern variables of $p_i$ are bound to +the corresponding parts of the selector value. If no matching pattern +is found, a \code{scala.MatchError} exception is thrown. + +The pattern in a case may also be followed by a guard suffix \ \code{if e}\ +with a boolean expression $e$. The guard expression is evaluated if +the preceding pattern in the case matches. If the guard expression +evaluates to \code{true}, the pattern match succeeds as normal. If the +guard expression evaluates to \code{false}, the pattern in the case +is considered not to match and the search for a matching pattern +continues. + +\comment{ +A case with several patterns $\CASE;p_1 \commadots p_n ;\IF; e \Arrow b$ is a +shorthand for a sequence of single-pattern cases $\CASE;p_1;\IF;e \Arrow b +;\ldots; \CASE;p_n ;\IF;e\Arrow b$. In this case none of the patterns +$p_i$ may contain a named pattern variable (but the patterns may contain +wild-cards). +} + +In the interest of efficiency the evaluation of a pattern matching +expression may try patterns in some other order than textual +sequence. This might affect evaluation through +side effects in guards. However, it is guaranteed that a guard +expression is evaluated only if the pattern it guards matches. + +\example +Often, pattern matching expressions are used as arguments +of the \code{match} method, which is predefined in class \code{Any} +(\sref{sec:cls-object}) and is implemented there by postfix function +application. Here is an example: +\begin{lstlisting} +def length [a] (xs: List[a]) = xs match { + case Nil => 0 + case x :: xs1 => 1 + length (xs1) +} +\end{lstlisting} + +\chapter{Top-Level Definitions} +\label{sec:topdefs} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + CompilationUnit ::= [package QualId `;'] {TopStat `;'} TopStat + TopStat ::= {Modifier} ClsDef + | Import + | Packaging + | + QualId ::= id {`.' id} +\end{lstlisting} + +A compilation unit consists of a sequence of packagings, import +clauses, and class and object definitions, which may be preceded by a +package clause. + +A compilation unit ~\lstinline@package $p$; $\stats$@~ starting with a package +clause is equivalent to a compilation unit consisting of a single +packaging ~\lstinline@package $p$ { $\stats$ }@. + +Implicitly imported into every compilation unit are, in that order : +the package \code{java.lang}, the package \code{scala}, and the object +\code{scala.Predef} (\sref{cls:predef}). Members of a later import in +that order hide members of an earlier import. + +\section{Packagings}\label{sec:packagings} + +\syntax\begin{lstlisting} + Packaging ::= package QualId `{' {TopStat `;'} TopStat `}' +\end{lstlisting} + +A package is a special object which defines a set of member classes, +objects and packages. Unlike other objects, packages are not introduced +by a definition. Instead, the set of members of a package is determined by +packagings. + +A packaging \ \code{package p { ds }}\ injects all definitions in +\code{ds} as members into the package whose qualified name is +$p$. If a definition in \code{ds} is labeled \code{private}, it +is visible only for other members in the package. + +Selections \code{p.m} from $p$ as well as imports from $p$ +work as for objects. However, unlike other objects, packages may not +be used as values. It is illegal to have a package with the same fully +qualified name as a module or a class. + +Top-level definitions outside a packaging are assumed to be injected +into a special empty package. That package cannot be named and +therefore cannot be imported. However, members of the empty package +are visible to each other without qualification. + +\example The following example will create a hello world program as +function \code{main} of module \code{test.HelloWorld}. +\begin{lstlisting} +package test; + +object HelloWord { + def main(args: Array[String]) = System.out.println("hello world") +} +\end{lstlisting} + +\chapter{Local Type Inference} +\label{sec:local-type-inf} + +To be completed. + +\chapter{The Scala Standard Library} + +The Scala standard library consists of the package \code{scala} with a +number of classes and modules. Some of these classes are described in +the following. + +\section{Root Classes} +\label{sec:cls-root} +\label{sec:cls-any} +\label{sec:cls-object} + +The root of the Scala class hierarchy is formed by class \code{Any}. +Every class in a Scala execution environment inherits directly or +indirectly from this class. Class \code{Any} has two direct +subclasses: \code{AnyRef} and\code{AnyVal}. + +The subclass \code{AnyRef} represents all values which are represented +as objects in the underlying host system. Every user-defined Scala +class inherits directly or indirectly from this class. Furthermore, +every user-defined Scala class also inherits the trait +\code{scala.ScalaObject}. Classes written in other languages still +inherit from \code{scala.AnyRef}, but not from +\code{scala.ScalaObject}. + +The class \code{AnyVal} has a fixed number subclasses, which describe +values which are not implemented as objects in the underlying host +system. + +Classes \code{AnyRef} and \code{AnyVal} are required to provide only +the members declared in class \code{Any}, but implementations may add +host-specific methods to these classes (for instance, an +implementation may identify class \code{AnyRef} with its own root +class for objects). + +The standard interfaces of these root classes is described by the +following definitions. + +\begin{lstlisting} +package scala; +abstract class Any { + + /** Reference equality */ + final def eq(that: Any): boolean = $\ldots$ + + /** Defined equality */ + def equals(that: Any): boolean = this eq that; + + /** Semantic equality between values of same type */ + final def == (that: Any): boolean = this equals that + + /** Semantic inequality between values of same type */ + final def != (that: Any): boolean = !(this == that) + + /** Hash code */ + def hashCode(): Int = $\ldots$ + + /** Textual representation */ + def toString(): String = $\ldots$ + + /** Type test */ + def isInstanceOf[a]: Boolean = match { + case x: a => true + case _ => false + } + + /** Type cast */ + def asInstanceOf[a]: a = match { + case x: a => x + case _ => if (this eq null) this + else throw new ClassCastException() + } + + /** Pattern match */ + def match[a, b](cases: a => b): b = cases(this); +} +final class AnyVal extends Any; +class AnyRef extends Any; +trait ScalaObject extends AnyRef; +\end{lstlisting} + +The type cast operation \verb@asInstanceOf@ has a special meaning (not +expressed in the code above) when its type parameter is a numeric +type. For any type \lstinline@T <: Double@, and any numeric value +\verb@v@ \lstinline@v.asInstanceIf[T]@ converts \code{v} to type +\code{T} using the rules of Java's numeric type cast operation. The +conversion might truncate the numeric value (as when going from +\code{Long} to \code{Int} or from \code{Int} to \code{Byte}) or it +might lose precision (as when going from \code{Double} to \code{Float} +or when converting between \code{Long} and \code{Float}). + +\section{Value Classes} +\label{cls:value} + +Value classes are classes whose instances are not represented as +objects by the underlying host system. All value classes inherit from +class \code{AnyVal}. Scala implementations need to provide the +value classes \code{Unit}, \code{Boolean}, \code{Double}, \code{Float}, +\code{Long}, \code{Int}, \code{Char}, \code{Short}, and \code{Byte} +(but are free to provide others as well). +The signatures of these classes are defined in the following. + +\subsection{Class \large{\code{Double}}} + +\begin{lstlisting} +package scala; +abstract sealed class Double extends AnyVal { + def + (that: Double): Double // double addition + def - (that: Double): Double // double subtraction + def * (that: Double): Double // double multiplication + def / (that: Double): Double // double division + def % (that: Double): Double // double remainder + + def == (that: Double): Boolean // double equality + def != (that: Double): Boolean // double inequality + def < (that: Double): Boolean // double less + def > (that: Double): Boolean // double greater + def <= (that: Double): Boolean // double less or equals + def >= (that: Double): Boolean // double greater or equals + + def - : Double = 0.0 - this // double negation + def + : Double = this +} +\end{lstlisting} + +\subsection{Class \large{\code{Float}}} + +\begin{lstlisting} +package scala; +abstract sealed class Float extends AnyVal { + def coerce: Double // convert to Double + + def + (that: Double): Double; // double addition + def + (that: Float): Double // float addition + /* analogous for -, *, /, % */ + + def == (that: Double): Boolean; // double equality + def == (that: Float): Boolean; // float equality + /* analogous for !=, <, >, <=, >= */ + + def - : Float; // float negation + def + : Float +} +\end{lstlisting} + +\subsection{Class \large{\code{Long}}} + +\begin{lstlisting} +package scala; +abstract sealed class Long extends AnyVal { + def coerce: Double // convert to Double + def coerce: Float // convert to Float + + def + (that: Double): Double; // double addition + def + (that: Float): Double; // float addtion + def + (that: Long): Long = // long addition + /* analogous for -, *, /, % */ + + def << (cnt: Int): Long // long left shift + def >> (cnt: Int): Long // long signed right shift + def >>> (cnt: Int): Long // long unsigned right shift + def & (that: Long): Long // long bitwise and + def | (that: Long): Long // long bitwise or + def ^ (that: Long): Long // long bitwise exclusive or + + def == (that: Double): Boolean; // double equality + def == (that: Float): Boolean; // float equality + def == (that: Long): Boolean // long equality + /* analogous for !=, <, >, <=, >= */ + + def - : Long; // long negation + def + : Long; // long identity + def ~ : Long // long bitwise negation +} +\end{lstlisting} + +\subsection{Class \large{\code{Int}}} + +\begin{lstlisting} +package scala; +abstract sealed class Int extends AnyVal { + def coerce: Double // convert to Double + def coerce: Float // convert to Float + def coerce: Long // convert to Long + + def + (that: Double): Double; // double addition + def + (that: Float): Double; // float addtion + def + (that: Long): Long; // long addition + def + (that: Int): Int; // int addition + /* analogous for -, *, /, % */ + + def << (cnt: Int): Int; // int left shift + /* analogous for >>, >>> */ + + def & (that: Long): Long; // long bitwise and + def & (that: Int): Int; // int bitwise and + /* analogous for |, ^ */ + + def == (that: Double): Boolean; // double equality + def == (that: Float): Boolean; // float equality + def == (that: Long): Boolean // long equality + def == (that: Int): Boolean // int equality + /* analogous for !=, <, >, <=, >= */ + + def - : Int; // int negation + def + : Int; // int identity + def ~ : Int; // int bitwise negation +} +\end{lstlisting} + +\subsection{Class \large{\code{Short}}} + +\begin{lstlisting} +package scala; +abstract sealed class Short extends AnyVal { + def coerce: Double // convert to Double + def coerce: Float // convert to Float + def coerce: Long // convert to Long + def coerce: Int // convert to Int +} +\end{lstlisting} + +\subsection{Class \large{\code{Char}}} + +\begin{lstlisting} +package scala; +abstract sealed class Char extends AnyVal { + def coerce: Double // convert to Double + def coerce: Float // convert to Float + def coerce: Long // convert to Long + def coerce: Int // convert to Int + + def isDigit: Boolean; // is this character a digit? + def isLetter: Boolean; // is this character a letter? + def isLetterOrDigit: Boolean; // is this character a letter or digit? + def isWhiteSpace // is this a whitespace character? +} +\end{lstlisting} + +\subsection{Class \large{\code{Short}}} + +\begin{lstlisting} +package scala; +abstract sealed class Short extends AnyVal { + def coerce: Double // convert to Double + def coerce: Float // convert to Float + def coerce: Long // convert to Long + def coerce: Int // convert to Int + def coerce: Short // convert to Short +} +\end{lstlisting} + +\subsection{Class \large{\code{Boolean}}} +\label{sec:cls-boolean} + +\begin{lstlisting} +package scala; +abstract sealed class Boolean extends AnyVal { + def && (def x: Boolean): Boolean; // boolean and + def || (def x: Boolean): Boolean; // boolean or + def & (x: Boolean): Boolean; // boolean strict and + def | (x: Boolean): Boolean // boolean strict or + + def == (x: Boolean): Boolean // boolean equality + def != (x: Boolean): Boolean // boolean inequality + + def ! (x: Boolean): Boolean // boolean negation +} +\end{lstlisting} + +\subsection{Class \large{\code{Unit}}} + +\begin{lstlisting} +package scala; +abstract sealed class Unit extends AnyVal; +\end{lstlisting} + +\section{Standard Reference Classes} +\label{cls:reference} + +This section presents some standard Scala reference classes which are +treated in a special way in Scala compiler -- either Scala provides +syntactic sugar for them, or the Scala compiler generates special code +for their operations. Other classes in the standard Scala library are +documented by HTML pages elsewhere. + +\subsection{Class \large{\code{String}}} + +The \verb@String@ class is usually derived from the standard String +class of the underlying host system (and may be identified with +it). For Scala clients the class is taken to support in each case a +method +\begin{lstlisting} +def + (that: Any): String +\end{lstlisting} +which concatenates its left operand with the textual representation of its +right operand. + +\subsection{The \large{\code{Tuple}} classes} + +Scala defines tuple classes \lstinline@Tuple$n$@ for $n = 2 \commadots 9$. +These are defined as follows. + +\begin{lstlisting} +package scala; +case class Tuple$n$[+a_1, ..., +a_n](_1: a_1, ..., _$n$: a_$n$) { + def toString = "(" ++ _1 ++ "," ++ $\ldots$ ++ "," ++_$n$ ++ ")" +} +\end{lstlisting} + +The implicity imported \code{Predef} object (\sref{cls:predef}) defines +the names \code{Pair} as an alias of \code{Tuple2} and \code{Triple} +as an alias for \code{Tuple3}. + +\subsection{The \large{\code{Function}} Classes} +\label{sec:cls-function} + +Scala defines function classes \lstinline@Function$n$@ for $n = 1 \commadots 9$. +These are defined as follows. + +\begin{lstlisting} +package scala; +class Function$n$[-a_1, ..., -a_$n$, +b] { + def apply(x_1: a_1, ..., x_$n$: a_$n$): b; + def toString = "<function>"; +} +\end{lstlisting} + +\comment{ +There is also a module \code{Function}, defined as follows. +\begin{lstlisting} +package scala; +module Function { + def compose[a](fs: List[(a)a]): (a)a = { + x => fs match { + case Nil => x + case f :: fs1 => compose(fs1)(f(x)) + } + } +} +\end{lstlisting} +} + +A subclass of \lstinline@Function1@ represents partial functions, +which are undefined on some points in their domain. In addition to the +\code{apply} method of functions, partial functions also have a +\code{isDefined} method, which tells whether the function is defined +at the given argument: +\begin{lstlisting} +class PartialFunction[-a,+b] extends Function1[a, b] { + def isDefinedAt(x: a): Boolean +} +\end{lstlisting} + +The implicity imported \code{Predef} object (\sref{cls:predef}) defines the name +\code{Function} as an alias of \code{Function1}. + +\subsection{Class \large{\code{Array}}}\label{cls:array} + +The class of generic arrays is given as follows. + +\begin{lstlisting} +package scala; +class Array[a](length: int) with Function[Int, a] { + def length: int; + def apply(i: Int): a; + def update(i: Int)(x: a): Unit; +} +\end{lstlisting} + +\comment{ +\begin{lstlisting} +module Array { + def create[a](i1: Int): Array[a] = Array[a](i1) + def create[a](i1: Int, i2: Int): Array[Array[a]] = { + val x: Array[Array[a]] = create(i1) + 0 to (i1 - 1) do { i => x(i) = create(i2) } + x + } + $\ldots$ + def create[a](i1: Int, i2: Int, i3: Int, i4: Int, i5: Int, + i6: Int, i7: Int, i8: Int, i9: Int, i10: Int) + : Array[Array[Array[Array[Array[Array[Array[Array[Array[Array[a]]]]]]]]]] = { + val x: Array[Array[Array[Array[Array[Array[Array[Array[Array[a]]]]]]]]] = create(i1) + 0 to (i1 - 1) do { i => x(i) = create(i2, i3, i4, i5, i6, i7, i8, i9, i10) } + x + } +} +\end{lstlisting} +} + +\section{The \large{\code{Predef}} Object}\label{cls:predef} + +The \code{Predef} module defines standard functions and type aliases +for Scala programs. It is always implicity imported, so that all its +defined members are available without qualification. Here is its +definition for the JVM environment. + +\begin{lstlisting} +package scala; +object Predef { + type byte = scala.Byte; + type short = scala.Short; + type char = scala.Char; + type int = scala.Int; + type long = scala.Long; + type float = scala.Float; + type double = scala.Double; + type boolean = scala.Boolean; + type unit = scala.Unit; + + type String = java.lang.String; + type NullPointerException = java.lang.NullPointerException; + type Throwable = java.lang.Throwable; + // other aliases to be identified + + /** Abort with error message */ + def error(message: String): All = throw new Error(message); + + /** Throw an error if given assertion does not hold. */ + def assert(assertion: Boolean): Unit = + if (!assertion) throw new Error("assertion failed"); + + /** Throw an error with given message if given assertion does not hold */ + def assert(assertion: Boolean, message: Any): Unit = { + if (!assertion) throw new Error("assertion failed: " + message); + + /** Create an array with given elements */ + def Array[A](xs: A*): Array[A] = { + val array: Array[A] = new Array[A](xs.length); + var i = 0; + for (val x <- xs.elements) { array(i) = x; i = i + 1; } + array; + } + + /** Aliases for pairs and triples */ + type Pair[+p, +q] = Tuple2[p, q]; + def Pair[a, b](x: a, y: b) = Tuple2(x, y); + type Triple[+a, +b, +c] = Tuple3[a, b, c]; + def Triple[a, b, c](x: a, y: b, z: c) = Tuple3(x, y, z); + + /** Alias for unary functions */ + type Function = Function1; + + /** Some standard simple functions */ + def id[a](x: a): a = x; + def fst[a](x: a, y: Any): a = x; + def scd[a](x: Any, y: a): a = y; +} +\end{lstlisting} + +\appendix +\chapter{Scala Syntax Summary} + +The lexical syntax of Scala is given by the following grammar in EBNF +form. + +\begin{lstlisting} + upper ::= `A' | $\ldots$ | `Z' | `$\Dollar$' | `_' + lower ::= `a' | $\ldots$ | `z' + letter ::= upper | lower + digit ::= `0' | $\ldots$ | `9' + special ::= $\mbox{\rm\em ``all other characters except parentheses ([{}]) and periods''}$ + + op ::= special {special} + varid ::= lower {letter | digit} [`_' [id]] + id ::= upper {letter | digit} [`_' [id]] + | varid + | op + | `\'stringLit + + intLit ::= $\mbox{\rm\em ``as in Java''}$ + floatLit ::= $\mbox{\rm\em ``as in Java''}$ + charLit ::= $\mbox{\rm\em ``as in Java''}$ + stringLit ::= $\mbox{\rm\em ``as in Java''}$ + symbolLit ::= `\'' id + + comment ::= `/*' ``any sequence of characters'' `*/' + | `//' `any sequence of characters up to end of line'' +\end{lstlisting} + +The context-free syntax of Scala is given by the following EBNF +grammar. + +\begin{lstlisting} + Literal ::= intLit + | floatLit + | charLit + | stringLit + | symbolLit + | true + | false + | null + + StableId ::= id + | Path `.' id + Path ::= StableId + | [id `.'] this + | [id '.'] super [`[' id `]']`.' id + + Type ::= Type1 `=>' Type + | `(' [Types] `)' `=>' Type + | Type1 + Type1 ::= SimpleType {with SimpleType} [Refinement] + SimpleType ::= SimpleType TypeArgs + | SimpleType `#' id + | StableId + | Path `.' type + | `(' Type ')' + TypeArgs ::= `[' Types `]' + Types ::= Type {`,' Type} + Refinement ::= `{' [RefineStat {`;' RefineStat}] `}' + RefineStat ::= Dcl + | type TypeDef {`,' TypeDef} + | + + Exprs ::= Expr {`,' Expr} + Expr ::= Bindings `=>' Expr + | Expr1 + Expr1 ::= if `(' Expr1 `)' Expr [[`;'] else Expr] + | try `{' Block `}' [catch Expr] [finally Expr] + | do Expr [`;'] while `(' Expr ')' + | for `(' Enumerators `)' (do | yield) Expr + | return [Expr] + | throw Expr + | [SimpleExpr `.'] id `=' Expr + | SimpleExpr ArgumentExprs `=' Expr + | PostfixExpr [`:' Type1] + PostfixExpr ::= InfixExpr [id] + InfixExpr ::= PrefixExpr + | InfixExpr id PrefixExpr + PrefixExpr ::= [`-' | `+' | `~' | `!'] SimpleExpr + SimpleExpr ::= Literal + | Path + | `(' [Expr] `)' + | BlockExpr + | new Template + | SimpleExpr `.' id + | SimpleExpr TypeArgs + | SimpleExpr ArgumentExprs + ArgumentExprs ::= `(' [Exprs] ')' + | BlockExpr + BlockExpr ::= `{' CaseClause {CaseClause} `}' + | `{' Block `}' + Block ::= {BlockStat `;'} [ResultExpr] + BlockStat ::= Import + | Def + | {LocalModifier} ClsDef + | Expr1 + | + ResultExpr ::= Expr1 + | Bindings `=>' Block + + Enumerators ::= Generator {`;' Enumerator} + Enumerator ::= Generator + | Expr + Generator ::= val Pattern1 `<-' Expr + + CaseClause ::= case Pattern [`if' PostfixExpr] `=>' Block + + Constr ::= StableId [TypeArgs] [`(' [Exprs] `)'] + + Pattern ::= Pattern1 { `|' Pattern1 } + Pattern1 ::= varid `:' Type + | `_' `:' Type + | Pattern2 + Pattern2 ::= [varid `@'] Pattern3 + Pattern3 ::= SimplePattern [ '*' | '?' | '+' ] + | SimplePattern { id SimplePattern } + SimplePattern ::= `_' + | varid + | Literal + | StableId [ `(' [Patterns] `)' ] + | `(' [Patterns] `)' + Patterns ::= Pattern {`,' Pattern} + + TypeParamClause ::= `[' TypeParam {`,' TypeParam} `]' + FunTypeParamClause ::= `[' TypeDcl {`,' TypeDcl} `]' + TypeParam ::= [`+' | `-'] TypeDcl + ParamClause ::= `(' [Param {`,' Param}] `)' + Param ::= [def] id `:' Type [`*'] + Bindings ::= id [`:' Type1] + | `(' Binding {`,' Binding `)' + Binding ::= id [`:' Type] + + Modifier ::= LocalModifier + | private + | protected + | override + LocalModifier ::= abstract + | final + | sealed + + Template ::= Constr {`with' Constr} [TemplateBody] + TemplateBody ::= `{' [TemplateStat {`;' TemplateStat}] `}' + TemplateStat ::= Import + | {Modifier} Def + | {Modifier} Dcl + | Expr + | + + Import ::= import ImportExpr {`,' ImportExpr} + ImportExpr ::= StableId `.' (id | `_' | ImportSelectors) + ImportSelectors ::= `{' {ImportSelector `,'} + (ImportSelector | `_') `}' + ImportSelector ::= id [`=>' id | `=>' `_'] + + Dcl ::= val ValDcl {`,' ValDcl} + | var VarDcl {`,' VarDcl} + | def FunDcl {`,' FunDcl} + | type TypeDcl {`,' TypeDcl} + ValDcl ::= id `:' Type + VarDcl ::= id `:' Type + FunDcl ::= id [FunTypeParamClause] {ParamClause} `:' Type + TypeDcl ::= id [`>:' Type] [`<:' Type] + + Def ::= val PatDef {`,' PatDef} + | var VarDef {`,' VarDef} + | def FunDef {`,' FunDef} + | type TypeDef {`,' TypeDef} + | ClsDef + PatDef ::= Pattern `=' Expr + VarDef ::= id [`:' Type] `=' Expr + | id `:' Type `=' `_' + FunDef ::= id [FunTypeParamClause] {ParamClause} + [`:' Type] `=' Expr + | this ParamClause `=' ConstrExpr + TypeDef ::= id [TypeParamClause] `=' Type + ClsDef ::= ([case] class | trait) ClassDef {`,' ClassDef} + | [case] object ObjectDef {`,' ObjectDef} + ClassDef ::= id [TypeParamClause] [ParamClause] + [`:' SimpleType] ClassTemplate + ObjectDef ::= id [`:' SimpleType] ClassTemplate + ClassTemplate ::= extends Template + | TemplateBody + | + ConstrExpr ::= this ArgumentExprs + | `{' this ArgumentExprs {`;' BlockStat} `}' + + CompilationUnit ::= [package QualId `;'] {TopStat `;'} TopStat + TopStat ::= {Modifier} ClsDef + | Import + | Packaging + | + Packaging ::= package QualId `{' {TopStat `;'} TopStat `}' + QualId ::= id {`.' id} +\end{lstlisting} + +\chapter{Implementation Status} + +The present Scala compiler does not yet implement all of the Scala +specification. Its currently existing omissions and deviations are +listed below. We are working on a refined implementation that +addresses these issues. +\begin{enumerate} +\item +Unicode support is still limited. At present we only permit Unicode +encodings \verb@\uXXXX@ in strings and backquote-enclosed identifiers. +To define or access a Unicode identifier, you need to put it in +backquotes and use the \verb@\uXXXX@ encoding. +\item +The unicode operator ``$\Rightarrow$'' +(\sref{sec:idents}) is not yet recognized; you need to use the two +character ASCII equivalent ``\code{=>}'' instead. +\item +The current implementation does not yet support run-time types. +All types are erased (\sref{sec:erasure}) during compilation. This means that +the following operations give potentially wrong results. +\begin{itemize} +\item +Type tests and type casts to parameterized types. Here it is only tested +that a value is an instance of the given top-level type constructor. +\item +Type tests and type casts to type parameters and abstract types. Here +it is only tested that a value is an instance of the type parameter's upper bound. +\item +Polymorphic array creation. If \code{t} is a type variable or abstract type, then +\code{new Array[t]} will yield an array of the upper bound of \code{t}. +\end{itemize} +\item +Return expressions are not yet permitted inside an anonymous function +or inside a call-by-name argument (i.e.\ a function argument corresponding to a +\code{def} parameter). +\item +Members of the empty package (\sref{sec:packagings}) cannot yet be +accessed from other source files. Hence, all library classes and +objects have to be in some package. +\item +At present, auxiliary constructors (\sref{sec:constr-defs}) are only permitted +for monomorphic classes. +\item +The \code{Array} class supports as yet only a restricted set of +operations as given in \sref{cls:array}. It is planned to extend that +interface. In particular, arrays will implement the \code{scala.Seq} +trait as well as the methods needed to support for-comprehensions. +\item +At present, all classes used as mixins must be accessible to the Scala +compiler in source form. +\end{enumerate} + +\end{document} + + +\comment{ +\section{Definitions} + +For a possibly recursive definition such as $\LET;x_1 = e_1 +;\ldots; \LET x_n = e_n$, local type inference proceeds as +follows. +A first phase assigns {\em a-priori types} to the $x_i$. The a-priori +type of $x$ is the declared type of $x$ if a declared type is +given. Otherwise, it is the inherited type, if one is +given. Otherwise, it is undefined. + +A second phase assigns completely defined types to the $x_i$, in some +order. The type of $x$ is the a-priori type, if it is completely +defined. Otherwise, it is the a-priori type of $x$'s right hand side. +The a-priori type of an expression $e$ depends on the form of $e$. +\begin{enumerate} +\item +The a-priori type of a +typed expression $e:T$ is $T$. +\item +The a-priori type of a class instance +creation expression $c;\WITH;(b)$ is $C;\WITH;R$ where $C$ is the +type of the class given in $c$ and $R$ is the a-priori type of block +$b$. +\item +The a-priori type of a block is a record consisting the a-priori +types of each non-private identifier which is declared in the block +and which is visible at in last statement of the block. Here, it is +required that every import clause $\IMPORT;e_1 \commadots e_n$ refers +to expressions whose type can be computed with the type information +determined so far. Otherwise, a compile time error results. +\item +The a-priori type of any other expression is the expression's type, if +that type can be computed with the type information determined so far. +Otherwise, a compile time error results. +\end{enumerate} +The compiler will find an ordering in which types are assigned without +compiler errors to all variables $x_1 \commadots x_n$, if such an +ordering exists. This can be achieved by lazy evaluation. +} +\section{Exceptions} +\label{sec:exceptions} + +There is a predefined type \code{Throwable}, as well as functions to +throw and handle values of type \code{Throwable}. These are declared +as follows. + +\begin{lstlisting} + class Throwable { + def throw[a]: a + } + class ExceptOrFinally[a] { + def except (handler: PartialFunction[Throwable,a]): a + def finally (def handler: Unit): a + } + def try [a] (def body: a): ExceptOrFinally[a] +\end{lstlisting} + +The type \code{Throwable} represents exceptions and error objects; it +may be identified with an analogous type of the underlying +implementation such as \code{java.lang.Throwable}. We will in the +following loosely call values of type \code{Throwable} exceptions. + +The \code{throw} method in \code{Throwable} aborts execution of the +thread executing it and passes the thrown exception to the handler +that was most recently installed by a +\code{try} function in the current thread. If no \code{try} method is +active, the thread terminates. + +The \code{try} function executes its body with the given exception +handler. A \code{try} expression comes in two forms. The first form is + +\begin{lstlisting} +try $body$ except $handler$ . +\end{lstlisting} + +If $body$ executes without an exception being thrown, then executing +the try expression is equivalent to just executing $body$. If some +exception is thrown from within $body$ for which \code{handler} is defined, +the handler is invoked with the thrown exception as argument. + +The second form of a try expression is + +\begin{lstlisting} +try $body$ finally $handler$ . +\end{lstlisting} + +This expression will execute $body$. A normal execution of $body$ is +followed by an invocation of the $handler$ expression. The $handler$ +expression does not take arguments and has \code{Unit} as result type. +If execution of the handler expression throws an exception, this +exception is propagated out of the \code{try} statement. Otherwise, +if an exception was thrown in $body$ prior to invocation of $handler$, +that exception is re-thrown after the invocation. Finally, if both +$body$ and $handler$ terminate normally, the original result of +$body$ is the result of the \code{try} expression. + +\example An example of a try-except expression: + +\begin{lstlisting} +try { + System.in.readString() +} except { + case ex: EndOfFile => "" +} +\end{lstlisting} + +\example An example of a try-finally expression: + +\begin{lstlisting} +file = open (fileName) +if (file != null) { + try { + process (file) + } finally { + file.close + } +} +\end{lstlisting} + +\section{Concurrency} +\label{sec:concurrency} + +\subsection{Basic Concurrency Constructs} + +Scala programs may be executed by several threads that operate +concurrently. The thread model used is based on the model of the +underlying run-time system. We postulate a predefined +class \code{Thread} for run-time threads, +\code{fork} function to spawn off a new thread, +as well as \code{Monitor} and \code{Signal} classes. These are +specified as follows\notyet{Concurrency constructs are}. + + +\begin{lstlisting} +class Thread { $\ldots$ } +def fork (def p: Unit): Thread +\end{lstlisting} + +The \code{fork} function runs its argument computation \code{p} in a +separate thread. It returns the thread object immediately to its +caller. Unhandled exceptions (\sref{sec:exceptions}) thrown during +evaluation of \code{p} abort execution of the forked thread and are +otherwise ignored. + +\begin{lstlisting} +class Monitor { + def synchronized [a] (def e: a): a +} +\end{lstlisting} + +Monitors define a \code{synchronized} method which provides mutual +exclusion between threads. It executes its argument computation +\code{e} while asserting exclusive ownership of the monitor +object whose method is invoked. If some other thread has ownership of +the same monitor object, the computation is delayed until the other +process has relinquished its ownership. Ownership of a monitor is +relinquished at the end of the argument computation, and while the +computation is waiting for a signal. + +\begin{lstlisting} +class Signal { + def wait: Unit + def wait(msec: Long): Unit + def notify: Unit + def notifyAll: Unit +} +\end{lstlisting} + +The \code{Signal} class provides the basic means for process +synchronization. The \code{wait} method of a signal suspends the +calling thread until it is woken up by some future invocation of the +signal's \code{notify} or \code{notifyAll} method. The \code{notify} +method wakes up one thread that is waiting for the signal. The +\code{notifyAll} method wakes up all threads that are waiting for the +signal. A second version of the \code{wait} method takes a time-out +parameter (given in milliseconds). A thread calling \code{wait(msec)} +will suspend until unblocked by a \code{notify} or \code{notifyAll} +method, or until the \code{msec} millseconds have passed. + +\subsection{Channels} + +\begin{lstlisting} +class Channel[a] { + def write(x: a): Unit + def read: a +} +\end{lstlisting} + +An object of type \code{Channel[a]} Channels offer a write-operation +which writes data of type \code{a} to the channel, and a read +operation, which returns written data as a result. The write operation +is non-blocking; that is it returns immediately without waiting for +the written data to be read. + +\subsection{Message Spaces} + +The Scala library also provides message spaces as a higher-level, +flexible construct for process synchronization and communication. A +{\em message} is an arbitrary object that inherits from the +\code{Message} class. +There is a special message \code{TIMEOUT} which is used to signal a time-out. +\begin{lstlisting} +class Message +case class TIMEOUT extends Message +\end{lstlisting} +Message spaces implement the following class. +\begin{lstlisting} +class MessageSpace { + def send(msg: Message): Unit + def receive[a](f: PartialFunction1[Message, a]): a + def receiveWithin[a](msec: Long)(f: PartialFunction1[Message, a]): a +} +\end{lstlisting} +The state of a message space consists of a multi-set of messages. +Messages are added to the space using the \code{send} method. Messages +are removed using the \code{receive} method, which is passed a message +processor \code{f} as argument, which is a partial function from +messages to some arbitrary result type. Typically, this function is +implemented as a pattern matching expression. The \code{receive} +method blocks until there is a message in the space for which its +message processor is defined. The matching message is then removed +from the space and the blocked thread is restarted by applying the +message processor to the message. Both sent messages and receivers are +ordered in time. A receiver $r$ is applied to a matching message $m$ +only if there is no other (message, receiver) pair which precedes $(m, +r)$ in the partial ordering on pairs that orders each component in +time. + +The message space class also offers a method \code{receiveWithin} +which blocks for only a specified maximal amount of time. If no +message is received within the specified time interval (given in +milliseconds), the message processor argument $f$ will be unblocked +with the special \code{TIMEOUT} message. + +case class extends { $\ldots$ } + +trait List { } +class Nil +class Cons + +\comment{changes: + Type ::= SimpleType {with SimpleType} [with Refinement] + | class SimpleType + SimpleType ::= SimpleType [TypeArgs] + | `(' [Types] `)' + | + | this +} |