Trait providing assertion methods that can be called at compile time from macros to validate literals in source code.
An AnyVal
for positive Double
s.
An AnyVal
for positive Double
s.
Note: a PosDouble
may not equal 0. If you want positive
number or 0, use PosZDouble.
Because PosDouble
is an AnyVal
it
will usually be as efficient as an Double
, being
boxed only when a Double
would have been boxed.
The PosDouble.apply
factory method is
implemented in terms of a macro that checks literals for
validity at compile time. Calling
PosDouble.apply
with a literal
Double
value will either produce a valid
PosDouble
instance at run time or an error at
compile time. Here's an example:
scala> import anyvals._ import anyvals._ scala> PosDouble(1.0) res1: org.scalactic.anyvals.PosDouble = PosDouble(1.0) scala> PosDouble(0.0) <console>:14: error: PosDouble.apply can only be invoked on a positive (i > 0.0) floating point literal, like PosDouble(42.0). PosDouble(0.0) ^
PosDouble.apply
cannot be used if the value
being passed is a variable (i.e., not a literal),
because the macro cannot determine the validity of variables
at compile time (just literals). If you try to pass a
variable to PosDouble.apply
, you'll get a
compiler error that suggests you use a different factor
method, PosDouble.from
, instead:
scala> val x = 1.0 x: Double = 1.0 scala> PosDouble(x) <console>:15: error: PosDouble.apply can only be invoked on a floating point literal, like PosDouble(42.0). Please use PosDouble.from instead. PosDouble(x) ^
The PosDouble.from
factory method will inspect
the value at runtime and return an
Option[PosDouble]
. If the value is valid,
PosDouble.from
will return a
Some[PosDouble]
, else it will return a
None
. Here's an example:
scala> PosDouble.from(x) res4: Option[org.scalactic.anyvals.PosDouble] = Some(PosDouble(1.0)) scala> val y = 0.0 y: Double = 0.0 scala> PosDouble.from(y) res5: Option[org.scalactic.anyvals.PosDouble] = None
The PosDouble.apply
factory method is marked
implicit, so that you can pass literal Double
s
into methods that require PosDouble
, and get the
same compile-time checking you get when calling
PosDouble.apply
explicitly. Here's an example:
scala> def invert(pos: PosDouble): Double = Double.MaxValue - pos invert: (pos: org.scalactic.anyvals.PosDouble)Double scala> invert(1.1) res6: Double = 1.7976931348623157E308 scala> invert(Double.MaxValue) res8: Double = 0.0 scala> invert(0.0) <console>:15: error: PosDouble.apply can only be invoked on a positive (i > 0.0) floating point literal, like PosDouble(42.0). invert(0.0) ^ scala> invert(-1.0) <console>:15: error: PosDouble.apply can only be invoked on a positive (i > 0.0) floating point literal, like PosDouble(42.0). invert(-1.0) ^
This example also demonstrates that the
PosDouble
companion object also defines implicit
widening conversions when a similar conversion is provided in
Scala. This makes it convenient to use a
PosDouble
where a Double
is
needed. An example is the subtraction in the body of the
invert
method defined above,
Double.MaxValue - pos
. Although
Double.MaxValue
is a Double
, which
has no -
method that takes a
PosDouble
(the type of pos
), you
can still subtract pos
, because the
PosDouble
will be implicitly widened to
Double
.
An AnyVal
for positive Float
s.
An AnyVal
for positive Float
s.
Note: a PosFloat
may not equal 0. If you want positive
number or 0, use PosZFloat.
Because PosFloat
is an AnyVal
it
will usually be as efficient as an Float
, being
boxed only when an Float
would have been boxed.
The PosFloat.apply
factory method is implemented
in terms of a macro that checks literals for validity at
compile time. Calling PosFloat.apply
with a
literal Float
value will either produce a valid
PosFloat
instance at run time or an error at
compile time. Here's an example:
scala> import anyvals._ import anyvals._ scala> PosFloat(1.0F) res0: org.scalactic.anyvals.PosFloat = PosFloat(1.0) scala> PosFloat(0.0F) <console>:14: error: PosFloat.apply can only be invoked on a positive (i > 0.0F) floating point literal, like PosFloat(42.0F). PosFloat(0.0F) ^
PosFloat.apply
cannot be used if the value being
passed is a variable (i.e., not a literal), because
the macro cannot determine the validity of variables at
compile time (just literals). If you try to pass a variable
to PosFloat.apply
, you'll get a compiler error
that suggests you use a different factor method,
PosFloat.from
, instead:
scala> val x = 1.0F x: Float = 1.0 scala> PosFloat(x) <console>:15: error: PosFloat.apply can only be invoked on a floating point literal, like PosFloat(42.0F). Please use PosFloat.from instead. PosFloat(x) ^
The PosFloat.from
factory method will inspect
the value at runtime and return an
Option[PosFloat]
. If the value is valid,
PosFloat.from
will return a
Some[PosFloat]
, else it will return a
None
. Here's an example:
scala> PosFloat.from(x) res3: Option[org.scalactic.anyvals.PosFloat] = Some(PosFloat(1.0)) scala> val y = 0.0F y: Float = 0.0 scala> PosFloat.from(y) res4: Option[org.scalactic.anyvals.PosFloat] = None
The PosFloat.apply
factory method is marked
implicit, so that you can pass literal Float
s
into methods that require PosFloat
, and get the
same compile-time checking you get when calling
PosFloat.apply
explicitly. Here's an example:
scala> def invert(pos: PosFloat): Float = Float.MaxValue - pos invert: (pos: org.scalactic.anyvals.PosFloat)Float scala> invert(1.1F) res5: Float = 3.4028235E38 scala> invert(Float.MaxValue) res6: Float = 0.0 scala> invert(0.0F) <console>:15: error: PosFloat.apply can only be invoked on a positive (i > 0.0F) floating point literal, like PosFloat(42.0F). invert(0.0F) ^ scala> invert(-1.1F) <console>:15: error: PosFloat.apply can only be invoked on a positive (i > 0.0F) floating point literal, like PosFloat(42.0F). invert(-1.1F) ^
This example also demonstrates that the PosFloat
companion object also defines implicit widening conversions
when no loss of precision will occur. This makes it convenient to use a
PosFloat
where a Float
or wider
type is needed. An example is the subtraction in the body of
the invert
method defined above,
Float.MaxValue - pos
. Although
Float.MaxValue
is a Float
, which
has no -
method that takes a
PosFloat
(the type of pos
), you can
still subtract pos
, because the
PosFloat
will be implicitly widened to
Float
.
An AnyVal
for positive Int
s.
An AnyVal
for positive Int
s.
Note: a PosInt
may not equal 0. If you want positive
number or 0, use PosZInt.
Because PosInt
is an AnyVal
it will usually be
as efficient as an Int
, being boxed only when an Int
would have been boxed.
The PosInt.apply
factory method is implemented in terms of a macro that
checks literals for validity at compile time. Calling PosInt.apply
with
a literal Int
value will either produce a valid PosInt
instance
at run time or an error at compile time. Here's an example:
scala> import anyvals._ import anyvals._ scala> PosInt(1) res0: org.scalactic.anyvals.PosInt = PosInt(1) scala> PosInt(0) <console>:14: error: PosInt.apply can only be invoked on a positive (i > 0) integer literal, like PosInt(42). PosInt(0) ^
PosInt.apply
cannot be used if the value being passed is a variable (i.e., not a literal), because
the macro cannot determine the validity of variables at compile time (just literals). If you try to pass a variable
to PosInt.apply
, you'll get a compiler error that suggests you use a different factor method,
PosInt.from
, instead:
scala> val x = 1 x: Int = 1 scala> PosInt(x) <console>:15: error: PosInt.apply can only be invoked on an integer literal, like PosInt(42). Please use PosInt.from instead. PosInt(x) ^
The PosInt.from
factory method will inspect the value at runtime and return an Option[PosInt]
. If
the value is valid, PosInt.from
will return a Some[PosInt]
, else it will return a None
.
Here's an example:
scala> PosInt.from(x) res3: Option[org.scalactic.anyvals.PosInt] = Some(PosInt(1)) scala> val y = 0 y: Int = 0 scala> PosInt.from(y) res4: Option[org.scalactic.anyvals.PosInt] = None
The PosInt.apply
factory method is marked implicit, so that you can pass literal Int
s
into methods that require PosInt
, and get the same compile-time checking you get when calling
PosInt.apply
explicitly. Here's an example:
scala> def invert(pos: PosInt): Int = Int.MaxValue - pos invert: (pos: org.scalactic.anyvals.PosInt)Int scala> invert(1) res0: Int = 2147483646 scala> invert(Int.MaxValue) res1: Int = 0 scala> invert(0) <console>:15: error: PosInt.apply can only be invoked on a positive (i > 0) integer literal, like PosInt(42). invert(0) ^ scala> invert(-1) <console>:15: error: PosInt.apply can only be invoked on a positive (i > 0) integer literal, like PosInt(42). invert(-1) ^
This example also demonstrates that the PosInt
companion object also defines implicit widening conversions
when either no loss of precision will occur or a similar conversion is provided in Scala. (For example, the implicit
conversion from Int
to Float in Scala can lose precision.) This makes it convenient to
use a PosInt
where an Int
or wider type is needed. An example is the subtraction in the body
of the invert
method defined above, Int.MaxValue - pos
. Although Int.MaxValue
is
an Int
, which has no -
method that takes a PosInt
(the type of pos
),
you can still subtract pos
, because the PosInt
will be implicitly widened to Int
.
An AnyVal
for positive Long
s.
An AnyVal
for positive Long
s.
Note: a PosLong
may not equal 0. If you want positive
number or 0, use PosZLong.
Because PosLong
is an AnyVal
it
will usually be as efficient as an Long
, being
boxed only when an Long
would have been boxed.
The PosLong.apply
factory method is implemented
in terms of a macro that checks literals for validity at
compile time. Calling PosLong.apply
with a
literal Long
value will either produce a valid
PosLong
instance at run time or an error at
compile time. Here's an example:
scala> import anyvals._ import anyvals._ scala> PosLong(1L) res0: org.scalactic.anyvals.PosLong = PosLong(1) scala> PosLong(0L) <console>:14: error: PosLong.apply can only be invoked on a positive (i > 0L) integer literal, like PosLong(42L). PosLong(0L) ^
PosLong.apply
cannot be used if the value being
passed is a variable (i.e., not a literal), because
the macro cannot determine the validity of variables at
compile time (just literals). If you try to pass a variable
to PosLong.apply
, you'll get a compiler error
that suggests you use a different factor method,
PosLong.from
, instead:
scala> val x = 1L x: Long = 1 scala> PosLong(x) <console>:15: error: PosLong.apply can only be invoked on an integer literal, like PosLong(42L). Please use PosLong.from instead. PosLong(x) ^
The PosLong.from
factory method will inspect the
value at runtime and return an
Option[PosLong]
. If the value is valid,
PosLong.from
will return a
Some[PosLong]
, else it will return a
None
. Here's an example:
scala> PosLong.from(x) res3: Option[org.scalactic.anyvals.PosLong] = Some(PosLong(1)) scala> val y = 0L y: Long = 0 scala> PosLong.from(y) res4: Option[org.scalactic.anyvals.PosLong] = None
The PosLong.apply
factory method is marked
implicit, so that you can pass literal Long
s
into methods that require PosLong
, and get the
same compile-time checking you get when calling
PosLong.apply
explicitly. Here's an example:
scala> def invert(pos: PosLong): Long = Long.MaxValue - pos invert: (pos: org.scalactic.anyvals.PosLong)Long scala> invert(1L) res5: Long = 9223372036854775806 scala> invert(Long.MaxValue) res6: Long = 0 scala> invert(0L) <console>:15: error: PosLong.apply can only be invoked on a positive (i > 0L) integer literal, like PosLong(42L). invert(0L) ^ scala> invert(-1L) <console>:15: error: PosLong.apply can only be invoked on a positive (i > 0L) integer literal, like PosLong(42L). invert(-1L) ^
This example also demonstrates that the PosLong
companion object also defines implicit widening conversions
when either no loss of precision will occur or a similar
conversion is provided in Scala. (For example, the implicit
conversion from Long
to Double in
Scala can lose precision.) This makes it convenient to use a
PosLong
where a Long
or wider type
is needed. An example is the subtraction in the body of the
invert
method defined above, Long.MaxValue
- pos
. Although Long.MaxValue
is a
Long
, which has no -
method that
takes a PosLong
(the type of pos
),
you can still subtract pos
, because the
PosLong
will be implicitly widened to
Long
.
An AnyVal
for non-negative Double
s.
An AnyVal
for non-negative Double
s.
Because PosZDouble
is an AnyVal
it will usually be
as efficient as an Double
, being boxed only when a
Double
would have been boxed.
The PosZDouble.apply
factory method is
implemented in terms of a macro that checks literals for
validity at compile time. Calling
PosZDouble.apply
with a literal
Double
value will either produce a valid
PosZDouble
instance at run time or an error at
compile time. Here's an example:
scala> import anyvals._ import anyvals._ scala> PosZDouble(1.1) res0: org.scalactic.anyvals.PosZDouble = PosZDouble(1.1) scala> PosZDouble(0.0) res1: org.scalactic.anyvals.PosZDouble = PosZDouble(0.0) scala> PosZDouble(-1.1) <console>:14: error: PosZDouble.apply can only be invoked on a non-negative (i >= 0.0) floating point literal, like PosZDouble(42.0). PosZDouble(-1.1) ^
PosZDouble.apply
cannot be used if the value
being passed is a variable (i.e., not a literal),
because the macro cannot determine the validity of variables
at compile time (just literals). If you try to pass a
variable to PosZDouble.apply
, you'll get a
compiler error that suggests you use a different factor
method, PosZDouble.from
, instead:
scala> val x = 1.1 x: Double = 1.1 scala> PosZDouble(x) <console>:15: error: PosZDouble.apply can only be invoked on a floating point literal, like PosZDouble(42.0). Please use PosZDouble.from instead. PosZDouble(x) ^
The PosZDouble.from
factory method will inspect
the value at runtime and return an
Option[PosZDouble]
. If the value is valid,
PosZDouble.from
will return a
Some[PosZDouble]
, else it will return a
None
. Here's an example:
scala> PosZDouble.from(x) res4: Option[org.scalactic.anyvals.PosZDouble] = Some(PosZDouble(1.1)) scala> val y = -1.1 y: Double = -1.1 scala> PosZDouble.from(y) res5: Option[org.scalactic.anyvals.PosZDouble] = None
The PosZDouble.apply
factory method is marked implicit, so that
you can pass literal Double
s into methods that require
PosZDouble
, and get the same compile-time checking you get when
calling PosZDouble.apply
explicitly. Here's an example:
scala> def invert(pos: PosZDouble): Double = Double.MaxValue - pos invert: (pos: org.scalactic.anyvals.PosZDouble)Double scala> invert(0.0) res6: Double = 1.7976931348623157E308 scala> invert(Double.MaxValue) res7: Double = 0.0 scala> invert(-1.1) <console>:15: error: PosZDouble.apply can only be invoked on a non-negative (i >= 0.0) floating point literal, like PosZDouble(42.0). invert(-1.1) ^
This example also demonstrates that the
PosZDouble
companion object also defines
implicit widening conversions when a similar conversion is
provided in Scala. This makes it convenient to use a
PosZDouble
where a Double
or wider
type is needed. An example is the subtraction in the body of
the invert
method defined above,
Double.MaxValue - pos
. Although
Double.MaxValue
is a Double
, which
has no -
method that takes a
PosZDouble
(the type of pos
), you
can still subtract pos
, because the
PosZDouble
will be implicitly widened to
Double
.
An AnyVal
for non-negative Float
s.
An AnyVal
for non-negative Float
s.
Because PosZFloat
is an AnyVal
it will usually be
as efficient as an Float
, being boxed only when a
Float
would have been boxed.
The PosZFloat.apply
factory method is
implemented in terms of a macro that checks literals for
validity at compile time. Calling
PosZFloat.apply
with a literal
Float
value will either produce a valid
PosZFloat
instance at run time or an error at
compile time. Here's an example:
scala> import anyvals._ import anyvals._ scala> PosZFloat(1.1F) res0: org.scalactic.anyvals.PosZFloat = PosZFloat(1.1) scala> PosZFloat(0.0F) res1: org.scalactic.anyvals.PosZFloat = PosZFloat(0.0) scala> PosZFloat(-1.1F) <console>:14: error: PosZFloat.apply can only be invoked on a non-negative (i >= 0.0F) floating point literal, like PosZFloat(42.0F). PosZFloat(-1.1F) ^
PosZFloat.apply
cannot be used if the value
being passed is a variable (i.e., not a literal),
because the macro cannot determine the validity of variables
at compile time (just literals). If you try to pass a
variable to PosZFloat.apply
, you'll get a
compiler error that suggests you use a different factor
method, PosZFloat.from
, instead:
scala> val x = 1.1F x: Float = 1.1 scala> PosZFloat(x) <console>:15: error: PosZFloat.apply can only be invoked on a floating point literal, like PosZFloat(42.0F). Please use PosZFloat.from instead. PosZFloat(x) ^
The PosZFloat.from
factory method will inspect
the value at runtime and return an
Option[PosZFloat]
. If the value is valid,
PosZFloat.from
will return a
Some[PosZFloat]
, else it will return a
None
. Here's an example:
scala> PosZFloat.from(x) res4: Option[org.scalactic.anyvals.PosZFloat] = Some(PosZFloat(1.1)) scala> val y = -1.1F y: Float = -1.1 scala> PosZFloat.from(y) res5: Option[org.scalactic.anyvals.PosZFloat] = None
The PosZFloat.apply
factory method is marked implicit, so that
you can pass literal Float
s into methods that require
PosZFloat
, and get the same compile-time checking you get when
calling PosZFloat.apply
explicitly. Here's an example:
scala> def invert(pos: PosZFloat): Float = Float.MaxValue - pos invert: (pos: org.scalactic.anyvals.PosZFloat)Float scala> invert(0.0F) res6: Float = 3.4028235E38 scala> invert(Float.MaxValue) res7: Float = 0.0 scala> invert(-1.1F) <console>:15: error: PosZFloat.apply can only be invoked on a non-negative (i >= 0.0F) floating point literal, like PosZFloat(42.0F). invert(-1.1F) ^
This example also demonstrates that the
PosZFloat
companion object also defines
implicit widening conversions when a similar conversion is
provided in Scala. This makes it convenient to use a
PosZFloat
where a Float
or wider
type is needed. An example is the subtraction in the body of
the invert
method defined above,
Float.MaxValue - pos
. Although
Float.MaxValue
is an Float
, which
has no -
method that takes a
PosZFloat
(the type of pos
), you
can still subtract pos
, because the
PosZFloat
will be implicitly widened to
Float
.
An AnyVal
for non-negative Int
s.
An AnyVal
for non-negative Int
s.
Because PosZInt
is an AnyVal
it will usually be
as efficient as an Int
, being boxed only when an
Int
would have been boxed.
The PosZInt.apply
factory method is implemented in terms of a
macro that checks literals for validity at compile time. Calling
PosZInt.apply
with a literal Int
value will either
produce a valid PosZInt
instance at run time or an error at
compile time. Here's an example:
scala> import anyvals._ import anyvals._ scala> PosZInt(1) res0: org.scalactic.anyvals.PosZInt = PosZInt(1) scala> PosZInt(0) res1: org.scalactic.anyvals.PosZInt = PosZInt(0) scala> PosZInt(-1) <console>:14: error: PosZInt.apply can only be invoked on a non-negative (i >= 0) integer literal, like PosZInt(42). PosZInt(-1) ^
PosZInt.apply
cannot be used if the value being passed is a
variable (i.e., not a literal), because the macro cannot determine
the validity of variables at compile time (just literals). If you try to
pass a variable to PosZInt.apply
, you'll get a compiler error
that suggests you use a different factor method, PosZInt.from
,
instead:
scala> val x = 1 x: Int = 1 scala> PosZInt(x) <console>:15: error: PosZInt.apply can only be invoked on an integer literal, like PosZInt(42). Please use PosZInt.from instead. PosZInt(x) ^
The PosZInt.from
factory method will inspect the value at runtime and return an Option[PosZInt]
. If
the value is valid, PosZInt.from
will return a Some[PosZInt]
, else it will return a None
.
Here's an example:
scala> PosZInt.from(x) res4: Option[org.scalactic.anyvals.PosZInt] = Some(PosZInt(1)) scala> val y = -1 y: Int = -1 scala> PosZInt.from(y) res5: Option[org.scalactic.anyvals.PosZInt] = None
The PosZInt.apply
factory method is marked implicit, so that
you can pass literal Int
s into methods that require
PosZInt
, and get the same compile-time checking you get when
calling PosZInt.apply
explicitly. Here's an example:
scala> def invert(pos: PosZInt): Int = Int.MaxValue - pos invert: (pos: org.scalactic.anyvals.PosZInt)Int scala> invert(0) res7: Int = 2147483647 scala> invert(Int.MaxValue) res8: Int = 0 scala> invert(-1) <console>:15: error: PosZInt.apply can only be invoked on a non-negative (i >= 0) integer literal, like PosZInt(42). invert(-1) ^
This example also demonstrates that the PosZInt
companion object also defines implicit widening conversions
when either no loss of precision will occur or a similar
conversion is provided in Scala. (For example, the implicit
conversion from Int
to Float in
Scala can lose precision.) This makes it convenient to use a
PosZInt
where an Int
or wider type
is needed. An example is the subtraction in the body of the
invert
method defined above, Int.MaxValue
- pos
. Although Int.MaxValue
is an
Int
, which has no -
method that
takes a PosZInt
(the type of pos
),
you can still subtract pos
, because the
PosZInt
will be implicitly widened to
Int
.
An AnyVal
for non-negative Long
s.
An AnyVal
for non-negative Long
s.
Because PosZLong
is an AnyVal
it will usually be
as efficient as an Long
, being boxed only when an
Long
would have been boxed.
The PosZLong.apply
factory method is implemented in terms of a
macro that checks literals for validity at compile time. Calling
PosZLong.apply
with a literal Long
value will
either produce a valid PosZLong
instance at run time or an
error at compile time. Here's an example:
scala> import anyvals._ import anyvals._ scala> PosZLong(1L) res0: org.scalactic.anyvals.PosZLong = PosZLong(1) scala> PosZLong(0L) res1: org.scalactic.anyvals.PosZLong = PosZLong(0) scala> PosZLong(-1L) <console>:14: error: PosZLong.apply can only be invoked on a non-negative (i >= 0L) integer literal, like PosZLong(42L). PosZLong(-1L) ^
PosZLong.apply
cannot be used if the value being passed is a
variable (i.e., not a literal), because the macro cannot determine
the validity of variables at compile time (just literals). If you try to
pass a variable to PosZLong.apply
, you'll get a compiler error
that suggests you use a different factor method, PosZLong.from
,
instead:
scala> val x = 1L x: Long = 1 scala> PosZLong(x) <console>:15: error: PosZLong.apply can only be invoked on an integer literal, like PosZLong(42L). Please use PosZLong.from instead. PosZLong(x) ^
The PosZLong.from
factory method will inspect the value at runtime and return an Option[PosZLong]
. If
the value is valid, PosZLong.from
will return a Some[PosZLong]
, else it will return a None
.
Here's an example:
scala> PosZLong.from(x) res4: Option[org.scalactic.anyvals.PosZLong] = Some(PosZLong(1)) scala> val y = -1L y: Long = -1 scala> PosZLong.from(y) res5: Option[org.scalactic.anyvals.PosZLong] = None
The PosZLong.apply
factory method is marked implicit, so that
you can pass literal Long
s into methods that require
PosZLong
, and get the same compile-time checking you get when
calling PosZLong.apply
explicitly. Here's an example:
scala> def invert(pos: PosZLong): Long = Long.MaxValue - pos invert: (pos: org.scalactic.anyvals.PosZLong)Long scala> invert(0L) res6: Long = 9223372036854775807 scala> invert(Long.MaxValue) res7: Long = 0 scala> invert(-1L) <console>:15: error: PosZLong.apply can only be invoked on a non-negative (i >= 0L) integer literal, like PosZLong(42L). invert(-1L) ^
This example also demonstrates that the PosZLong
companion object also defines implicit widening conversions
when either no loss of precision will occur or a similar
conversion is provided in Scala. (For example, the implicit
conversion from Long
to Double in
Scala can lose precision.) This makes it convenient to use a
PosZLong
where a Long
or wider type
is needed. An example is the subtraction in the body of the
invert
method defined above, Long.MaxValue
- pos
. Although Long.MaxValue
is a
Long
, which has no -
method that
takes a PosZLong
(the type of pos
),
you can still subtract pos
, because the
PosZLong
will be implicitly widened to
Long
.
Companion object that facilitates the importing of CompileTimeAssertions
members as
an alternative to mixing in the trait.
Companion object that facilitates the importing of CompileTimeAssertions
members as
an alternative to mixing in the trait.
The companion object for PosDouble
that offers
factory methods that produce PosDouble
s,
implicit widening conversions from PosDouble
to
other numeric types, and maximum and minimum constant values
for PosDouble
.
The companion object for PosDouble
that offers
factory methods that produce PosDouble
s,
implicit widening conversions from PosDouble
to
other numeric types, and maximum and minimum constant values
for PosDouble
.
The companion object for PosFloat
that offers
factory methods that produce PosFloat
s,
implicit widening conversions from PosFloat
to
other numeric types, and maximum and minimum constant values
for PosFloat
.
The companion object for PosFloat
that offers
factory methods that produce PosFloat
s,
implicit widening conversions from PosFloat
to
other numeric types, and maximum and minimum constant values
for PosFloat
.
The companion object for PosInt
that offers factory methods that
produce PosInt
s, implicit widening conversions from PosInt
to other numeric types, and maximum and minimum constant values for PosInt
.
The companion object for PosInt
that offers factory methods that
produce PosInt
s, implicit widening conversions from PosInt
to other numeric types, and maximum and minimum constant values for PosInt
.
The companion object for PosLong
that offers
factory methods that produce PosLong
s, implicit
widening conversions from PosLong
to other
numeric types, and maximum and minimum constant values for
PosLong
.
The companion object for PosLong
that offers
factory methods that produce PosLong
s, implicit
widening conversions from PosLong
to other
numeric types, and maximum and minimum constant values for
PosLong
.
The companion object for PosZDouble
that offers
factory methods that produce PosZDouble
s, implicit
widening conversions from PosZDouble
to other
numeric types, and maximum and minimum constant values for
PosZDouble
.
The companion object for PosZDouble
that offers
factory methods that produce PosZDouble
s, implicit
widening conversions from PosZDouble
to other
numeric types, and maximum and minimum constant values for
PosZDouble
.
The companion object for PosZFloat
that offers
factory methods that produce PosZFloat
s, implicit
widening conversions from PosZFloat
to other
numeric types, and maximum and minimum constant values for
PosZFloat
.
The companion object for PosZFloat
that offers
factory methods that produce PosZFloat
s, implicit
widening conversions from PosZFloat
to other
numeric types, and maximum and minimum constant values for
PosZFloat
.
The companion object for PosZInt
that offers
factory methods that produce PosZInt
s, implicit
widening conversions from PosZInt
to other
numeric types, and maximum and minimum constant values for
PosZInt
.
The companion object for PosZInt
that offers
factory methods that produce PosZInt
s, implicit
widening conversions from PosZInt
to other
numeric types, and maximum and minimum constant values for
PosZInt
.
The companion object for PosZLong
that offers
factory methods that produce PosZLong
s, implicit
widening conversions from PosZLong
to other
numeric types, and maximum and minimum constant values for
PosZLong
.
The companion object for PosZLong
that offers
factory methods that produce PosZLong
s, implicit
widening conversions from PosZLong
to other
numeric types, and maximum and minimum constant values for
PosZLong
.
Trait providing assertion methods that can be called at compile time from macros to validate literals in source code.
The intent of
CompileTimeAssertions
is to make it easier to createAnyVal
s that restrict the values of types for which Scala supports literals:Int
,Long
,Float
,Double
,Char
, andString
. For example, if you are using odd integers in many places in your code, you might have validity checks scattered throughout your code. Here's an example of a method that both requires an oddInt
is passed (as a precondition, and ensures an odd *Int
is returned (as a postcondition):In either the precondition or postcondition check fails, an exception will be thrown at runtime. If you have many methods like this you may want to create a type to represent an odd
Int
, so that the checking for validity errors is isolated in just one place. By using anAnyVal
you can avoid boxing theInt
, which may be more efficient. This might look like:An
AnyVal
cannot have any constructor code, so to ensure that anyInt
passed to theOddInt
constructor is actually odd, the constructor must be private. That way the only way to construct a newOddInt
is via theapply
factory method in theOddInt
companion object, which can require that the value be odd. This design eliminates the need for placingrequire
andensuring
clauses anywhere else that oddInt
s are needed, because the type promises the constraint. ThenextOdd
method could, therefore, be rewritten as:Using the compile-time assertions provided by this trait, you can construct a factory method implemented vai a macro wthat causes a compile failure if
OddInt.apply
is passed anything besides an oddInt
literal. ClassOddInt
would look exactly the same as before:In the companion object, however, the
apply
method would be implemented in terms of a macro. Because theapply
method will only work with literals, you'll need a second method that can work an any expression of typeInt
. Although you could write a factory method that throws a runtime exception if a non-oddInt
is passed, we recommend afrom
method that returns anOption
. The returnedOption
can be processed to deal with the potential for non-odd values.The
apply
method refers to a macro implementation method in classPosIntMacro
. The macro implementation of any such method can look very similar to this one. The only changes you'd need to make is theisValid
method implementation and the text of the error messages.The
isValid
method just takes the underlying type and returnstrue
if it is valid, elsefalse
. This method is placed here so the same valiation code can be used both in thefrom
method at runtime and theapply
macro at compile time. Theapply
actually does just two things. It calls aensureValidIntLiteral
, performing a compile-time assertion that value passed toapply
is anInt
literal that is valid (in this case, odd). If the assertion fails,ensureValidIntLiteral
will complete abruptly with an exception that will contain an appropriate error message (one of the two you passed in) and cause a compiler error with that message. If the assertion succeeds,ensureValidIntLiteral
will just return normally. The next line of code will then execute. This line of code must construct an AST (abstract syntax tree) of code that will replace theOddInt.apply
invocation. We invoke the other factory method that returns anOption
, and since we've proven at compile time that thatOption
will be defined, we callget
on it.You may wish to use quasi-quotes instead of reify. The reason we use reify is that this also works on 2.10 without any additional plugin (i.e., you don't need macro paradise), and Scalactic supports 2.10.