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Home/ Questions/Q 6138457
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 23, 20262026-05-23T17:52:17+00:00 2026-05-23T17:52:17+00:00

I noticed that when I’m working with functions that expect other functions as parameters,

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I noticed that when I’m working with functions that expect other functions as parameters, I can sometimes do this:

someFunction(firstParam,anotherFunction)

But other times, the compiler is giving me an error, telling me that I should write a function like this, in order for it to treat it as a partially applied function:

someFunction(firstParam,anotherFunction _)

For example, if I have this:

object Whatever {
    def meth1(params:Array[Int]) = ...
    def meth2(params:Array[Int]) = ...
}

import Whatever._
val callbacks = Array(meth1 _,meth2 _)

Why can’t I have the code like the following:

val callbacks = Array(meth1,meth2)

Under what circumstances will the compiler tell me to add _?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-23T17:52:17+00:00Added an answer on May 23, 2026 at 5:52 pm

    The rule is actually simple: you have to write the _ whenever the compiler is not explicitly expecting a Function object.

    Example in the REPL:

    scala> def f(i: Int) = i    
    f: (i: Int)Int
    
    scala> val g = f
    <console>:6: error: missing arguments for method f in object $iw;
    follow this method with `_' if you want to treat it as a partially applied function
           val g = f
                   ^
    
    scala> val g: Int => Int = f  
    g: (Int) => Int = <function1>
    
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