I am exploring the Scala language. One claim I often hear is that Scala has a stronger type system than Java. By this I think what people mean is that:
The main advantage of the Scala Type system is not so much being stronger but rather being far richer (see "The Scala Type System").
(Java can define some of them, and implement others, but Scala has them built-in).
See also The Myth Makers 1: Scala's "Type Types", commenting Steve Yegge's blog post, where he "disses" Scala as "Frankenstein's Monster" because "there are type types, and type type types".
(type1, …)=>returnType
syntax),+T
declares type T
to be used only in covariant positions. Stack[T]
is a subtype of Stack[S]
if T
is a subtype of S
.-T
would declare T
to be used only in contravariant positions.The main safety problem with Java relates to variance. Basically, a programmer can use incorrect variance declarations that may result in exceptions being thrown at run-time in Java, while Scala will not allow it.
In fact, the very fact that Java's Array
is co-variant is already a problem, since it allows incorrect code to be generated. For instance, as exemplified by sepp2k:
String[] strings = {"foo"};
Object[] objects = strings;
objects[0] = new Object();
Then, of course, there are raw types in Java, which allows all sort of things.
Also, though Scala has it as well, there's casting. Java API is rich in type casts, and there's no idiom like Scala's case x: X => // x is now safely cast
. Sure, one case use instanceof
to accomplish that, but there's no incentive to do it. In fact, Scala's asInstanceOf
is intentionally verbose.
These are the things that make Scala's type system stronger. It is also much richer, as VonC shows.