Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
219 lines (176 loc) · 6.72 KB

annotations.md

File metadata and controls

219 lines (176 loc) · 6.72 KB
layout title partof num next-page previous-page redirect_from
tour
Annotations
scala-tour
34
packages-and-imports
by-name-parameters
/tutorials/tour/annotations.html

Annotations associate meta-information with definitions. For example, the annotation @deprecated before a method causes the compiler to print a warning if the method is used.

{% tabs annotations_1 class=tabs-scala-version %} {% tab 'Scala 2' for=annotations_1 %}

object DeprecationDemo extends App {
  @deprecated("deprecation message", "release # which deprecates method")
  def hello = "hola"

  hello
}

{% endtab %} {% tab 'Scala 3' for=annotations_1 %}

object DeprecationDemo extends App:
  @deprecated("deprecation message", "release # which deprecates method")
  def hello = "hola"

  hello

{% endtab %} {% endtabs %}

This will compile but the compiler will print a warning: "there was one deprecation warning".

An annotation clause applies to the first definition or declaration following it. More than one annotation clause may precede a definition and declaration. The order in which these clauses are given does not matter.

Annotations that ensure correctness of encodings

Certain annotations will actually cause compilation to fail if a condition(s) is not met. For example, the annotation @tailrec ensures that a method is tail-recursive. Tail-recursion can keep memory requirements constant. Here's how it's used in a method which calculates the factorial:

{% tabs annotations_2 class=tabs-scala-version %} {% tab 'Scala 2' for=annotations_2 %}

import scala.annotation.tailrec

def factorial(x: Int): Int = {

  @tailrec
  def factorialHelper(x: Int, accumulator: Int): Int = {
    if (x == 1) accumulator else factorialHelper(x - 1, accumulator * x)
  }
  factorialHelper(x, 1)
}

{% endtab %} {% tab 'Scala 3' for=annotations_2 %}

import scala.annotation.tailrec

def factorial(x: Int): Int =

  @tailrec
  def factorialHelper(x: Int, accumulator: Int): Int =
    if x == 1 then accumulator else factorialHelper(x - 1, accumulator * x)
  factorialHelper(x, 1)

{% endtab %} {% endtabs %}

The factorialHelper method has the @tailrec which ensures the method is indeed tail-recursive. If we were to change the implementation of factorialHelper to the following, it would fail:

{% tabs annotations_3 class=tabs-scala-version %} {% tab 'Scala 2' for=annotations_3 %}

import scala.annotation.tailrec

def factorial(x: Int): Int = {
  @tailrec
  def factorialHelper(x: Int): Int = {
    if (x == 1) 1 else x * factorialHelper(x - 1)
  }
  factorialHelper(x)
}

{% endtab %} {% tab 'Scala 3' for=annotations_3 %}

import scala.annotation.tailrec

def factorial(x: Int): Int =
  @tailrec
  def factorialHelper(x: Int): Int =
    if x == 1 then 1 else x * factorialHelper(x - 1)
  factorialHelper(x)

{% endtab %} {% endtabs %}

We would get the message "Recursive call not in tail position".

Annotations affecting code generation

{% tabs annotations_4 class=tabs-scala-version %} {% tab 'Scala 2' for=annotations_4 %}

Some annotations like @inline affect the generated code (i.e. your jar file might have different bytes than if you hadn't used the annotation). Inlining means inserting the code in a method's body at the call site. The resulting bytecode is longer, but hopefully runs faster. Using the annotation @inline does not ensure that a method will be inlined, but it will cause the compiler to do it if and only if some heuristics about the size of the generated code are met.

{% endtab %} {% tab 'Scala 3' for=annotations_4 %}

Some annotations like @main affect the generated code (i.e. your jar file might have different bytes than if you hadn't used the annotation). A @main annotation on a method generates an executable program that calls the method as an entry point.

{% endtab %} {% endtabs %}

Java Annotations

When writing Scala code which interoperates with Java, there are a few differences in annotation syntax to note. Note: Make sure you use the -target:jvm-1.8 option with Java annotations.

Java has user-defined metadata in the form of annotations. A key feature of annotations is that they rely on specifying name-value pairs to initialize their elements. For instance, if we need an annotation to track the source of some class we might define it as

{% tabs annotations_5 %} {% tab 'Java' for=annotations_5 %}

@interface Source {
  public String url();
  public String mail();
}

{% endtab %} {% endtabs %}

And then apply it as follows

{% tabs annotations_6 %} {% tab 'Java' for=annotations_6 %}

@Source(url = "https://coders.com/",
        mail = "support@coders.com")
public class MyJavaClass extends TheirClass ...

{% endtab %} {% endtabs %}

An annotation application in Scala looks like a constructor invocation, but to instantiate a Java annotation one has to use named arguments:

{% tabs annotations_7 %} {% tab 'Scala 2 and 3' for=annotations_7 %}

@Source(url = "https://coders.com/",
        mail = "support@coders.com")
class MyScalaClass ...

{% endtab %} {% endtabs %}

This syntax is quite tedious if the annotation contains only one element (without default value) so, by convention, if the name is specified as value it can be applied in Java using a constructor-like syntax:

{% tabs annotations_8 %} {% tab 'Java' for=annotations_8 %}

@interface SourceURL {
    public String value();
    public String mail() default "";
}

{% endtab %} {% endtabs %}

And then apply it as follows:

{% tabs annotations_9 %} {% tab 'Java' for=annotations_9 %}

@SourceURL("https://coders.com/")
public class MyJavaClass extends TheirClass ...

{% endtab %} {% endtabs %}

In this case, Scala provides the same possibility:

{% tabs annotations_10 %} {% tab 'Scala 2 and 3' for=annotations_10 %}

@SourceURL("https://coders.com/")
class MyScalaClass ...

{% endtab %} {% endtabs %}

The mail element was specified with a default value so we need not explicitly provide a value for it. However, if we need to provide one then in Java we must also explicitly name the value parameter:

{% tabs annotations_11 %} {% tab 'Java' for=annotations_11 %}

@SourceURL(value = "https://coders.com/",
           mail = "support@coders.com")
public class MyJavaClass extends TheirClass ...

{% endtab %} {% endtabs %}

Scala provides more flexibility in this respect, so we can choose to only name the mail parameter:

{% tabs annotations_12 %} {% tab 'Scala 2 and 3' for=annotations_12 %}

@SourceURL("https://coders.com/",
           mail = "support@coders.com")
class MyScalaClass ...

{% endtab %} {% endtabs %}