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Home/ Questions/Q 8982063
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 15, 20262026-06-15T20:29:33+00:00 2026-06-15T20:29:33+00:00

Possible Duplicate: scala: adding a method to List? I struggle to formulate what I’m

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Possible Duplicate:
scala: adding a method to List?

I struggle to formulate what I’m trying to do, but the code example should be pretty straightforward. If anyone knows a better way to phrase it, you are free to edit the title. 🙂

trait DiceThrow {
  list: List[Int] =>   // something like this??
  def yatzee = list.filter(_ == list.head).length >= 5
}

object Main extends App {
  val aThrow = List(4,4,4,4,4) with DiceThrow
  aThrow.yatzee  // => true    is what I want
}

So I want the aThrow: List[Int] to have some extra methods, like knowing whether it’s a yatzee or not. This is just one example I made up where adding some extra methods to e.g. a List could be useful.

Is this possible somehow? Or is there another approach that’s more the scala way? I believe it’s possible with implicit conversion(?)(they’re still pretty “magic” to me), but that seems unnecessarily dirty this use-case?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-15T20:29:34+00:00Added an answer on June 15, 2026 at 8:29 pm

    You can use enrich (pimp) my library pattern:

    class DiceList(list: List[Int]) {
      def yatzee = list.filter(_ == list.head).length >= 5
    }
    
    implicit def list2DiceList(list: List[Int]) = new DiceList(list)
    

    In scala 2.10 it could be simplified with implicit classes:

    implicit class DiceList(list: List[Int]) {
      def yatzee = list.filter(_ == list.head).length >= 5
    }
    

    Then you could use it like:

    object Main extends App {
      val aThrow = List(4,4,4,4,4)
      aThrow.yatzee  // => true
    }
    
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