Term symbols have their names of type TermName
.
Backing field for an accessor method, NoSymbol for all other term symbols.
The overloaded alternatives of this symbol.
A list of annotations attached to this Symbol.
For a class: its companion object if exists. For a module or a module class: companion class of the module if exists. For a package or a package class: NoSymbol. For all others: NoSymbol.
Exceptions that this method is known to throw. For Scala methods, the list is calculated from throws annotations present on a method. For Java methods, the list is calculated from throws
clauses attached to the method and stored in bytecode.
Filters the underlying alternatives (or a single-element list composed of the symbol itself if the symbol is not overloaded). Returns an overloaded symbol is there are multiple matches. Returns a NoSymbol if there are no matches.
The encoded full path name of this symbol, where outer names and inner names are separated by periods.
Getter method for a backing field of a val or a val, NoSymbol for all other term symbols.
The type signature of this symbol.
This method always returns signatures in the most generic way possible, even if the underlying symbol is obtained from an instantiation of a generic type. For example, signature of the method def map[B](f: (A) => B): List[B]
, which refers to the type parameter A
of the declaring class List[A]
, will always feature A
, regardless of whether map
is loaded from the List[_]
or from List[Int]
. To get a signature with type parameters appropriately instantiated, one should use infoIn
.
The type signature of this symbol seen as a member of given type site
.
Is this symbol abstract (i.e. an abstract class, an abstract method, value or type member)?
Is this symbol labelled as "abstract override"?
Does this symbol represent a getter or a setter?
Does this symbol represent a by-name parameter?
Does this symbol represent a field of a case class that corresponds to a parameter in the first parameter list of the primary constructor of that class?
Does this method represent a constructor?
If owner
is a class, then this is a vanilla JVM constructor. If owner
is a trait, then this is a mixin constructor.
Is this symbol final?
Does this symbol represent a getter of a field? If yes, isMethod
is also guaranteed to be true.
Does this symbol represent an implementation artifact that isn't meant for public use? Examples of such artifacts are erasure bridges and outer fields.
Does this symbol represent an implicit value, definition, class or parameter?
Is this symbol defined by Java?
Does this symbol represent a java annotation interface?
Does this symbol represent a java enum class or a java enum value?
Does this symbol represent a lazy value?
Is this symbol a macro?
Does this symbol represent an overloaded method? If yes, isMethod
is false, and the list of the enclosed alternatives can be found out via alternatives
.
Does this symbol represent the definition of a package? Known issues: https://github.com/scala/bug/issues/6732.
Does this symbol represent a package class? If yes, isClass
is also guaranteed to be true.
Does this symbol represent a field of a class that was generated from a parameter of that class?
Does this symbol represent a parameter with a default value?
Is this symbol a parameter (either a method parameter or a type parameter)?
Does this symbol denote the primary constructor of its enclosing class?
Does this symbol represent a private declaration or definition? If yes, privateWithin
might tell more about this symbol's visibility scope.
Does this symbol represent a declaration or definition written in a source file as private[this]
or generated in tree/symbol form with the combination of flags LOCAL and PRIVATE? If yes, isPrivate
is guaranteed to be true.
Does this symbol represent a protected declaration or definition? If yes, privateWithin
might tell more about this symbol's visibility scope.
Does this symbol represent a declaration or definition written in a source file as protected[this]
or generated in tree/symbol form with the combination of flags LOCAL and PROTECTED? If yes, isProtected
is guaranteed to be true,
Does this symbol represent a public declaration or definition?
Does this symbol represent a setter of a field? If yes, isMethod
is also guaranteed to be true.
Is this symbol a specialized type parameter or a generated specialized member?
Does this symbol denote a stable value?
Is this symbol static (i.e. with no outer instance)? Q: When exactly is a sym marked as STATIC? A: If it's a member of a toplevel object, or of an object contained in a toplevel object, or any number of levels deep. http://groups.google.com/group/scala-internals/browse_thread/thread/d385bcd60b08faf6
Does this symbol represent a synthetic (i.e. a compiler-generated) entity? Examples of synthetic entities are accessors for vals and vars.
Is this symbol introduced as val
?
Is this symbol introduced as var
?
Does this method support variable length argument lists?
If this is a NoSymbol, returns NoSymbol, otherwise returns the result of applying f
to this symbol.
The name of the symbol as a member of the Name
type.
Provides an alternate if symbol is a NoSymbol.
Returns all symbols overridden by this symbol.
The owner of this symbol. This is the symbol that directly contains the current symbol's definition. The NoSymbol
symbol does not have an owner, and calling this method on one causes an internal error. The owner of the Scala root class scala.reflect.api.Mirror.RootClass and the Scala root object scala.reflect.api.Mirror.RootPackage is NoSymbol
. Every other symbol has a chain of owners that ends in scala.reflect.api.Mirror.RootClass.
All parameter lists of the method.
Can be used to distinguish nullary methods and methods with empty parameter lists. For a nullary method, returns the empty list (i.e. List()
). For a method with an empty parameter list, returns a list that contains the empty list (i.e. List(List())
).
Position of the tree.
Set when symbol has a modifier of the form private[X] or protected[X], NoSymbol otherwise.
Access level encoding: there are three scala flags (PRIVATE, PROTECTED, and LOCAL) which combine with value privateWithin (the "foo" in private[foo]) to define from where an entity can be accessed. The meanings are as follows:
PRIVATE access restricted to class only. PROTECTED access restricted to class and subclasses only. LOCAL can only be set in conjunction with PRIVATE or PROTECTED. Further restricts access to the same object instance.
In addition, privateWithin can be used to set a visibility barrier. When set, everything contained in the named enclosing package or class has access. It is incompatible with PRIVATE or LOCAL, but is additive with PROTECTED (i.e. if either the flags or privateWithin allow access, then it is allowed.)
The java access levels translate as follows:
java private: isPrivate && (privateWithin == NoSymbol) java package: !isPrivate && !isProtected && (privateWithin == enclosingPackage) java protected: isProtected && (privateWithin == enclosingPackage) java public: !isPrivate && !isProtected && (privateWithin == NoSymbol)
The return type of the method.
Setter method for a backing field of a val or a val, NoSymbol for all other term symbols.
Does the same as filter
, but crashes if there are multiple matches.
For a polymorphic method, its type parameters, the empty list for all other methods
Source file if this symbol is created during this compilation run, or a class file if this symbol is loaded from a *.class or *.jar.
The return type is scala.reflect.io.AbstractFile
, which belongs to an experimental part of Scala reflection. It should not be used unless you know what you are doing. In subsequent releases, this API will be refined and exposed as a part of scala.reflect.api.
(Since version 2.11.0) use pos.source.file
instead
For a class: the module or case class factory with the same name in the same package. For a module: the class with the same name in the same package. For all others: NoSymbol.
This API may return unexpected results for module classes, packages and package classes. Use companion
instead in order to get predictable results.
(Since version 2.11.0) use companion
instead, but beware of possible changes in behavior
(Since version 2.11.0) use paramLists
instead
paramLists The name ending with "ss" indicates that the result type is a list of lists.
This symbol cast to a ClassSymbol representing a class or trait.
ScalaReflectionException
if isClass
is false.
This symbol cast to a MethodSymbol.
ScalaReflectionException
if isMethod
is false.
This symbol cast to a ModuleSymbol defined by an object definition.
ScalaReflectionException
if isModule
is false.
This symbol cast to a TermSymbol.
ScalaReflectionException
if isTerm
is false.
This symbol cast to a TypeSymbol.
ScalaReflectionException
if isType
is false.
Does this symbol represent the definition of a class or trait? If yes, isType
is also guaranteed to be true.
Does this symbol represent the definition of a method? If yes, isTerm
is also guaranteed to be true.
Does this symbol represent the definition of a module (i.e. it results from an object definition?). If yes, isTerm
is also guaranteed to be true.
Does this symbol represent the definition of a class implicitly associated with an object definition (module class in scala compiler parlance)? If yes, isType
is also guaranteed to be true.
Used to provide a better error message for asMethod
Does this symbol represent the definition of a term? Note that every symbol is either a term or a type. So for every symbol sym
(except for NoSymbol
), either sym.isTerm
is true or sym.isType
is true.
Does this symbol represent the definition of a type? Note that every symbol is either a term or a type. So for every symbol sym
(except for NoSymbol
), either sym.isTerm
is true or sym.isType
is true.
© 2002-2019 EPFL, with contributions from Lightbend.
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0.
https://www.scala-lang.org/api/2.13.0/scala-reflect/scala/reflect/api/Symbols$MethodSymbol.html
The type of method symbols representing def declarations.