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scalastructural-typing

Funny observation about (recursive) structural types in Scala


I needed some recursive structural type in some piece of code using with traits and the structural type as type parameter constraint. It worked fine, but later I learned Scala does not support recursive structural types.

So can someone explain me why this works fine:

scala> trait Test[M[A] <: { def map[B](f: A => B) : M[B] } ] {}
defined trait Test

and this not:

scala> def test[M[A] <: { def map[B](f: A => B) : M[B] } ] = null
<console>:5: error: illegal cyclic reference involving type M
       def test[M[A] <: { def map[B](f: A => B) : M[B] } ] = null

Solution

  • I think this is a glitch in the compiler. The following code exhibits the same behavior as your initial code:

    trait Test[M[A] <: { def map: M[A] } ] {}
    def test[M[A] <: { def map: M[A] } ] = null
    

    It results in a compile time error: 'illegal cyclic reference'.

    And the following code does not (i.e. it compiles fine):

    type S[M] = { def map: M }
    
    trait Test[M[A] <: S[M[A]] ] {}
    def test[M[A] <: S[M[A]] ] = null
    

    The only difference is that structural typing is applied via a type alias S here.