A method that should be called from every well-designed equals method that is open to be overridden in a subclass
A method that should be called from every well-designed equals method that is open to be overridden in a subclass. See Programming in Scala, Chapter 28 for discussion and design.
The equality method defined in AnyRef
The equality method defined in AnyRef.
Deconstruction of the Either type (in contrast to pattern matching)
Returns a hash code value for the object
Returns a hash code value for the object.
The default hashing algorithm is platform dependent.
Note that it is allowed for two objects to have identical hash
codes (o1.hashCode.equals(o2.hashCode)) yet not be
equal (o1.equals(o2) returns false). A
degenerate implementation could always return 0.
However, it is required that if two objects are equal
(o1.equals(o2) returns true) that they
have identical hash codes
(o1.hashCode.equals(o2.hashCode)). Therefore, when
overriding this method, be sure to verify that the behavior is
consistent with the equals method.
Returns true if this is a Left, false otherwise
Returns true if this is a Left, false otherwise.
Returns true if this is a Right, false otherwise
Returns true if this is a Right, false otherwise.
Joins an Either through Left
Joins an Either through Right
Projects this Either as a Left
return k for a product A(x_1,
return k for a product A(x_1,...,x_k)
for a product A(x_1,
for a product A(x_1,...,x_k), returns x_(n+1)
for 0 <= n < k
An iterator that returns all fields of this product
By default the empty string
By default the empty string. Implementations may override this method in order to prepend a string prefix to the result of the toString methods.
Projects this Either as a Right
If this is a Left, then return the left value in Right or vice versa
Returns a string representation of the object
Returns a string representation of the object.
The default representation is platform dependent.
The left side of the disjoint union, as opposed to the
Rightside.