Warning: I'm cross-posting from #scala
The book Programming in Scala states that path-dependent types are different depending on the exact instance of the path in question. If so, I don't understand why all the following predicates return true:
class Outer {
val in = new Inner
class Inner
}
val o1 = new Outer
val o2 = new Outer
o1.in.isInstanceOf[Outer#Inner] //makes perfect sense
o1.in.isInstanceOf[o1.Inner] //still makes sense, the path-dependent type is o1's own
o1.in.isInstanceOf[o2.Inner] //why is this true? PiS p.423 says the path-dependent types are different, they only share a common supertype Outer#Inner
o1.Inner
and o2.Inner
are different types, but their erasures are the same:
scala> class Outer {
| val in = new Inner
| class Inner
| }
defined class Outer
scala> val o1 = new Outer
o1: Outer = Outer@1d16ecf
scala> val m1 = implicitly[Manifest[o1.Inner]]
m1: Manifest[o1.Inner] = [email protected]#Outer$Inner
scala> m1.erasure
res0: java.lang.Class[_] = class Outer$Inner
scala> val o2 = new Outer
o2: Outer = Outer@138ef1d
scala> val m2 = implicitly[Manifest[o2.Inner]]
m2: Manifest[o2.Inner] = [email protected]#Outer$Inner
scala> m2.erasure
res1: java.lang.Class[_] = class Outer$Inner
and o1.in.isInstanceOf[o2.Inner]
can only check that o1.in
is an instance of the erasure of o2.Inner
.
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