|
Initially motivated by SI-5580, then just motivated. I broke up
the opaquely named JavaConversions and JavaConverters into the following
traits encapsulating some permutation of
{ to java, to scala, bidirectional }
{ wrappers, decorators }
I named everything consistently in terms of either Wrappers
or Decorators. Decorators install those asJava/asScala methods
onto collections of the right kind; Wrappers hide the process.
JavaConversions then reduces to an object which (ill-advisedly)
extends both WrapAsJava and WrapAsScala. And JavaConverters is
an object extending DecorateAsScala and DecorateAsJava. However
other more clearly named vals exist in the newly created
scala.collection.convert package object.
val decorateAsJava = new DecorateAsJava { }
val decorateAsScala = new DecorateAsScala { }
val decorateAll = new DecorateAsJava with DecorateAsScala { }
val wrapAsJava = new WrapAsJava { }
val wrapAsScala = new WrapAsScala { }
val wrapAll = new WrapAsJava with WrapAsScala { }
So for instance to import asScala decorators, and only those:
scala> import scala.collection.convert.decorateAsScala._
import scala.collection.convert.decorateAsScala._
scala> new java.util.ArrayList[String].asScala groupBy (x => x)
res0: scala.collection.immutable.Map[String,scala.collection.mutable.Buffer[String]] = Map()
I propose we put those vals or a subset of them in the scala
package object rather than way down in scala.collection.convert.
|