Reputation: 33369
I overloaded a case class's equality operator:
case class Polygon(points: Seq[(Double, Double)]) extends Shape {
def ==(that: Polygon): Boolean = { ... }
}
My unit tests pass when using double-equals in assertions:
import org.scalatest.FunSpec
class ShapeSpec extends FunSpec {
describe("Polygon") {
it("is equal to all its rotations") {
val p = Polygon(Seq( ... ))
for { i ← 0 until p.points.size } {
val q = Polygon(p.points.drop(i) ++ p.points.take(i))
assert(p == q)
}
}
}
}
But when using === instead of ==, the same tests fail:
[info] Polygon
[info] - is equal to all its rotations *** FAILED ***
[info] Polygon(List((-1.0,-1.0), (4.0,-1.0), (4.0,2.0), (1.0,2.0),
(1.0,1.0), (-1.0,1.0))) did not equal PolygonM(List((4.0,-1.0),
(4.0,2.0), (1.0,2.0), (1.0,1.0), (-1.0,1.0), (-1.0,-1.0)))
(ShapeSpec.scala:28)
Why does this happen?
Upvotes: 0
Views: 159
Reputation: 7979
You spelled it wrong. ;)
It should be:
override def equals(x: Any): Boolean
Upvotes: 3