AnyVal
AnyVal represents value classes. All value classes are predefined; they correspond to the primitive types of Java-like languages.
- There are nine predefined value types and they are non-null able: Double, Float, Long, Int, Short, Byte, Char, Unit, and Boolean.
- Scala has both numeric (e.g., Int and Double) and non-numeric types (e.g., String) that can be used to define values and variables.
- Boolean variables can only be true or false. Char literals are written with single-quotes.
- These are not nullable except Unit and all value classes are an abstract final type.
Example:
Scala
// Scala program of Scala Type hierarchy // Using AnyVal. // Creating Object object Geeks { // Main method def main(args : Array[String]) { val list : List[AnyVal] = List( 333 , true , false ) list.foreach(element = > println(element)) } } |
333 true false
Scala Type Hierarchy
There are no primitive types in Scala(unlike Java). All data types in Scala are objects that have methods to operate on their data. All of Scala’s types exist as part of a type hierarchy. Every class that we define in Scala will also belong to this hierarchy automatically.
Any
Any is the superclass of all classes, also called the top class. It defines certain universal methods such as equals, hashCode, and toString. Any has two direct subclasses:
- AnyVal
- AnyRef
Example:
Scala
// Scala program of Scala Type hierarchy // Creating object object Geeks { // Main method def main(args : Array[String]) { val list : List[Any] = List( false , 66677 , 732 , 'a' , "abs" ) list.foreach(element = > println(element)) } } |
false 66677 732 a abs