An annotation for methods whose bodies may be excluded from compiler-generated bytecode.
Behavior is influenced by passing -Xelide-below
to scalac
.
Calls to methods marked elidable (as well as the method body) will
be omitted from generated code if the priority given the annotation
is lower than that given on the command line.
@elidable(123) // annotation priority
scalac -Xelide-below 456 // command line priority
The method call will be replaced with an expression which depends on the type of the elided expression. In decreasing order of precedence:
Unit ()
Boolean false
T <: AnyVal 0
T >: Null null
T >: Nothing Predef.???
Complete example:
import scala.annotation._, elidable._
object Test extends App {
def expensiveComputation(): Int = { Thread.sleep(1000) ; 172 }
@elidable(WARNING) def warning(msg: String) = println(msg)
@elidable(FINE) def debug(msg: String) = println(msg)
@elidable(FINE) def computedValue = expensiveComputation()
warning("Warning! Danger! Warning!")
debug("Debug! Danger! Debug!")
println("I computed a value: " + computedValue)
}
% scalac example.scala && scala Test
Warning! Danger! Warning!
Debug! Danger! Debug!
I computed a value: 172
// INFO lies between WARNING and FINE
% scalac -Xelide-below INFO example.scala && scala Test
Warning! Danger! Warning!
I computed a value: 0
Note that only concrete methods can be marked @elidable
. A non-annotated method
is not elided, even if it overrides / implements a method that has the annotation.
Also note that the static type determines which annotations are considered:
import scala.annotation._, elidable._
class C { @elidable(0) def f(): Unit = ??? }
object O extends C { override def f(): Unit = println("O.f") }
object Test extends App {
O.f() // not elided
(O: C).f() // elided if compiled with `-Xelide-below 1`
}
- Companion
- object
- Source
- elidable.scala