--- title: Identifiers, Names & Scopes layout: default chapter: 2 --- # Identifiers, Names and Scopes Names in Scala identify types, values, methods, and classes which are collectively called _entities_. Names are introduced by local [definitions and declarations](04-basic-declarations-and-definitions.html#basic-declarations-and-definitions), [inheritance](05-classes-and-objects.html#class-members), [import clauses](04-basic-declarations-and-definitions.html#import-clauses), or [package clauses](09-top-level-definitions.html#packagings) which are collectively called _bindings_. Bindings of different kinds have a precedence defined on them: 1. Definitions and declarations that are local, inherited, or made available by a package clause and also defined in the same compilation unit as the reference, have highest precedence. 1. Explicit imports have next highest precedence. 1. Wildcard imports have next highest precedence. 1. Definitions made available by a package clause, but not also defined in the same compilation unit as the reference, have lowest precedence. There are two different name spaces, one for [types](03-types.html#types) and one for [terms](06-expressions.html#expressions). The same name may designate a type and a term, depending on the context where the name is used. A binding has a _scope_ in which the entity defined by a single name can be accessed using a simple name. Scopes are nested. A binding in some inner scope _shadows_ bindings of lower precedence in the same scope as well as bindings of the same or lower precedence in outer scopes. Note that shadowing is only a partial order. In the following example, neither binding of `x` shadows the other. Consequently, the reference to `x` in the last line of the block is ambiguous. ```scala val x = 1 locally { import p.X.x x } ``` A reference to an unqualified (type- or term-) identifier $x$ is bound by the unique binding, which - defines an entity with name $x$ in the same namespace as the identifier, and - shadows all other bindings that define entities with name $x$ in that namespace. It is an error if no such binding 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 binding. In that case, the type of $x$ is the type of the referenced entity. 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](03-types.html#value-types). The type of $e.x$ is the member type of the referenced entity in $T$. Binding precedence implies that the way source is bundled in files affects name resolution. In particular, imported names have higher precedence than names, defined in other files, that might otherwise be visible because they are defined in either the current package or an enclosing package. Note that a package definition is taken as lowest precedence, since packages are open and can be defined across arbitrary compilation units. ```scala package util { import scala.util class Random object Test extends App { println(new util.Random) // scala.util.Random } } ``` ###### Example Assume the following two definitions of objects named `X` in packages `p` and `q` in separate compilation units. ```scala package p { object X { val x = 1; val y = 2 } } package q { object X { val x = true; val y = false } } ``` The following program illustrates different kinds of bindings and precedences between them. ```scala package p { // `X' bound by package clause import Console._ // `println' bound by wildcard import object Y { println(s"L4: $X") // `X' refers to `p.X' here locally { import q._ // `X' bound by wildcard import println(s"L7: $X") // `X' refers to `q.X' here import X._ // `x' and `y' bound by wildcard import println(s"L9: $x") // `x' refers to `q.X.x' here locally { val x = 3 // `x' bound by local definition println(s"L12: $x") // `x' refers to constant `3' here locally { import q.X._ // `x' and `y' bound by wildcard import // println(s"L15: $x") // reference to `x' is ambiguous here import X.y // `y' bound by explicit import println(s"L17: $y") // `y' refers to `q.X.y' here locally { val x = "abc" // `x' bound by local definition import p.X._ // `x' and `y' bound by wildcard import // println(s"L21: $y") // reference to `y' is ambiguous here println(s"L22: $x") // `x' refers to string "abc" here }}}}}} ```