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Home/ Questions/Q 4014188
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 20, 20262026-05-20T09:28:00+00:00 2026-05-20T09:28:00+00:00

I noticed that scala.xml.Atom takes a type parameter A , even though all of

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I noticed that scala.xml.Atom takes a type parameter A, even though all of its subclasses extend Atom[String], and the documentation says “The class Atom provides an XML node for text (PCDATA).”

Are there legitimate use cases for instantiating an Atom with a type parameter other than string?

More concretely, I’m interested in using Scala XML literal to define sort of a nice DSL for defining an in-memory tree-based document structure, where many of the nodes would be existing scala classes. It would be super nice to use <document>{new JButton("Hi")}</document> and access the non-text data in the Atom[JButton] without having to define an XML serialization scheme for every existing class.

Is that a legitimate use case, or am I abusing the current implementation of Scala’s XML library?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-20T09:28:01+00:00Added an answer on May 20, 2026 at 9:28 am

    if you take a look into the sources the reason is revealled. Atom is generic because it converts the passed object to a String. So you can pass a JButton to it but then it will just call its toString method. (line 48 is what matters)

    I guess it is possible to get the data back out of the atom:

    val doc = <document>{ 42 }</document>
    
    doc.child.head match { 
      case i: Atom[Int] => i.data / 7 
      case _ => error("Unsupported type")
    }
    

    returns 6. So your plan would work. I still think a tree based on abstract classes and case classes would be a better choice because with your method all type safety is gone as you can pass in everything, so that type errors will not be discovered until runtime.

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