Minimal Working Example (Scala 2.9.2):
object Main extends App {
class A {
var a=0
}
val b = Array.fill(2)(new A)
b(1).a = 9
println(b(0).a) //prints 0
println(b(1).a) //prints 9
val a = new A
val c = Array.fill(2)(a)
c(1).a = 9
println(c(0).a) //prints 9
println(c(1).a) //prints 9
}
A related question is "Is it the same with imported Java classes?" How can I workaround, if I need to fill an Array inside a function with copies of an instance passed as argument? [Regarding identical copies, it was worth to me to check out the easy cloning library.
Just adding the workaround to a function call, based on answers:
class A {
var a=0
}
def f(a: => A) { // "=>" added
val b = Array.fill(2)(a)
b(1).a=9
println(b(0).a) //prints 0
println(b(1).a) //prints 9
}
f(new A)
Another way is to declare a function, not a value def a = new A
:
object Main extends App {
class A {
var a=0
}
val b = Array.fill(2)(new A)
b(1).a = 9
println(b(0).a) //prints 0
println(b(1).a) //prints 9
def a = new A
val c = Array.fill(2)(a)
c(1).a = 9
println(c(0).a) //prints 0
println(c(1).a) //prints 9
}