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Home/ Questions/Q 177593
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Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T14:04:54+00:00 2026-05-11T14:04:54+00:00

Perhaps I am barking up the wrong tree (again) but if it is normal

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Perhaps I am barking up the wrong tree (again) but if it is normal practice to have a property typed as a scala.collection.immutable.Set[A], then how would you create one of these given a scala.Iterable[A]? For example:

class ScalaClass {     private var s: scala.collection.immutable.Set[String]      def init(): Unit = {         val i = new scala.collection.mutable.HashSet[String]          //ADD SOME STUFF TO i          s = scala.collection.immutable.Set(i) //DOESN'T WORK          s = scala.collection.immutable.Set(i toSeq : _ *) //THIS WORKS     } } 

Can someone explain why it is necessary to create the immutable set via a Seq (or if it is not, then how do I do it)?

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  1. 2026-05-11T14:04:55+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 2:04 pm

    Basically because you’re creating the immutable Set through the ‘canonical factory method’ apply in Set’s companion object, which takes a sequence, or ‘varargs’ (as in Set(a,b,c)). See this:
    http://scala-tools.org/scaladocs/scala-library/2.7.1/scala/collection/immutable/Set$object.html

    I don’t think there is another to do it in the standard library.

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