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Home/ Questions/Q 6332051
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 24, 20262026-05-24T18:11:20+00:00 2026-05-24T18:11:20+00:00

Take the following function: def fMatch(s: String) = { s match { case a

  • 0

Take the following function:

def fMatch(s: String) = {
    s match {
        case "a" => println("It was a")
        case _ => println("It was something else")
    }
}

This pattern matches nicely:

scala> fMatch("a")
It was a

scala> fMatch("b")
It was something else

What I would like to be able to do is the following:

def mMatch(s: String) = {
    val target: String = "a"
    s match {
        case target => println("It was" + target)
        case _ => println("It was something else")
        }
}

This gives off the following error:

fMatch: (s: String)Unit
<console>:12: error: unreachable code
               case _ => println("It was something else")

I guess this is because it thinks that target is actually a name you’d like to assign to whatever the input is. Two questions:

  1. Why this behaviour? Can’t case just look for existing variables in scope that have appropriate type and use those first and, if none are found, then treat target as a name to patternmatch over?

  2. Is there a workaround for this? Any way to pattern match against variables? Ultimately one could use a big if statement, but match case is more elegant.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-24T18:11:21+00:00Added an answer on May 24, 2026 at 6:11 pm

    What you’re looking for is a stable identifier. In Scala, these must either start with an uppercase letter, or be surrounded by backticks.

    Both of these would be solutions to your problem:

    def mMatch(s: String) = {
        val target: String = "a"
        s match {
            case `target` => println("It was" + target)
            case _ => println("It was something else")
        }
    }
    
    def mMatch2(s: String) = {
        val Target: String = "a"
        s match {
            case Target => println("It was" + Target)
            case _ => println("It was something else")
        }
    }
    

    To avoid accidentally referring to variables that already existed in the enclosing scope, I think it makes sense that the default behaviour is for lowercase patterns to be variables and not stable identifiers. Only when you see something beginning with upper case, or in back ticks, do you need to be aware that it comes from the surrounding scope.

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