There are a few things going on.
First, Scala allows dots and parens to be omitted from many method calls, so 20 seconds
is equivalent to 20.seconds()
*.
Second, an "implicit conversion" is applied. Since 20
is an Int
and Int
has no seconds
method, the compiler searches for an implicit conversion that takes an Int
and returns something that does have a seconds
method, with the search constrained by the scope of your method call.
You have imported DurationInt into your scope. Since DurationInt
is an implicit class with an Int
parameter, its constructor defines an implicit Int => DurationInt
conversion. DurationInt
has a seconds
method, so it satisfies all the search criteria. Therefore, the compiler rewrites your call as new DurationInt(20).seconds
**.
*I mean this loosely. 20.seconds()
is actually invalid because the seconds
method has no parameter list and therefore the parens must be omitted on the method call.
**Actually, this isn't quite true because DurationInt
is a value class, so the compiler will avoid wrapping the integer if possible.
The "magic" that's going on there is called "implicit conversion". You are importing the implicit conversions, and some of them handle the conversion between Int (and Double) to Duration. That's what's you are dealing with.
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