Given this Person
case class:
scala> case class Person(name: String, age: Int) {}
defined class Person
… and this instance
scala> val b = Person("Kevin", 100)
b: Person = Person(Kevin,100)
Is there a reason to prefer this code (with @
)
scala> b match {
| case p @ Person(_, age) => println("age")
| case _ => println("none")
| }
age
… over the following?
scala> b match {
| case Person(_, age) => println("age")
| case _ => println("none")
| }
age
Perhaps I'm missing the meaning/power of @
?
Best Answer
You only include the
@
when you want to also deal with the object itself. Hence:Otherwise, there's no real point in including it.