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Why is the Manifest not available in the constructor?

Consider this code:

class Foo[T : Manifest](val id: String = manifest[T].erasure.getName)

I basically want to store an identifier in Foo, which is often just the class name.

Subclass which do not need a special identifier could then easily use the default value.

But this doesn't even compile, the error message is:

error: No Manifest available for T.

Is there another approach which will work?

EDIT:

Why does this work if the manifest isn't available until the primary constructor?

class Foo[T: Manifest](val name: String) { 
  def this() = this(manifest[T].erasure.getName)
}
like image 613
soc Avatar asked Sep 03 '11 17:09

soc


1 Answers

When the syntactic sugar is removed from that context bound, it gets rewritten as:

class Foo[T]
  (val id: String = implicitly[Manifest[T]].erasure.getName)
  (implicit ev$1: Manifest[T]) = ...

So the Manifest evidence simply isn't available when determining the default value of id. I'd instead write something like this:

class Foo[T : Manifest](id0: String = "") {
  val id = if (id0 != "") id0 else manifest[T].erasure.getName
}

In your second approach (which is a great solution, by the way!), expect a rewrite similar to:

class Foo[T](val name: String)(implicit x$1: Manifest[T]) { 
  def this()(implicit ev$2: Manifest[T]) = this(manifest[T].erasure.getName)
}

So yes, the manifest is available before the call to manifest[T].erasure

like image 158
Kevin Wright Avatar answered Sep 20 '22 01:09

Kevin Wright