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Home/ Questions/Q 500147
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T06:03:27+00:00 2026-05-13T06:03:27+00:00

Let’s assume this function: def autoClosing(f: {def close();})(t: =>Unit) = { t f.close() }

  • 0

Let’s assume this function:

def autoClosing(f: {def close();})(t: =>Unit) = {
    t
    f.close()
}

and this snippet:

val a = autoClosing(new X)(_)
a {
 println("before close")
}

is it possible to curry the first part? Something like:

val a = autoClosing(_) { println("before close") }

so that I could send the objects on which close should be performed, and have the same block executed on them?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T06:03:28+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 6:03 am

    Yes, the snippet you have given works, as long as you give the type of the placeholder character.

    Therefore, the code you are looking for is:

    val a = autoClosing(_: {def close();}) { println("before close") }
    

    which compiles and works as expected :).

    A couple of notes:

    • You can make your life easier if you define a type alias for an AnyRef type having a close method, something like type Closeable = AnyRef {def close()}, or an appropriate interface.
    • The code snippet autoClosing(_: Closeable){ ... } is actually equivalent to the following expanded anonymous function: c: Closeable => autoClosing(c){ ... }. The wildcard character is just shorthand for a partially applied function. You need to give the type of the _ as the type inferer unfortunately cannot infer the type in this case.

    Hope it helps,

    — Flaviu Cipcigan

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