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Home/ Questions/Q 8394743
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 9, 20262026-06-09T20:08:07+00:00 2026-06-09T20:08:07+00:00

While looking at scala.collection.mutable.SynchronizedStack I’ve noticed that synchronized used differently, some methods use synchronized[this.type]

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While looking at scala.collection.mutable.SynchronizedStack I’ve noticed that synchronized used differently, some methods use synchronized[this.type] form

override def push(elem: A): this.type = synchronized[this.type] { super.push(elem) }
override def pushAll(xs: TraversableOnce[A]): this.type = synchronized[this.type] { super.pushAll(elems) }

and some uses synchronized form

override def isEmpty: Boolean = synchronized { super.isEmpty }
override def pop(): A = synchronized { super.pop }

What’s the difference?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-09T20:08:08+00:00Added an answer on June 9, 2026 at 8:08 pm

    The signature of synchronized (declared by AnyRef) is

    final def synchronized[T0](arg0: => T0): T0
    

    If you use it as

    override def isEmpty: Boolean = synchronized { super.isEmpty }
    

    then you leave it to the compiler to infer the return type of the function passed to synchronized (here Boolean). If you use it as

    override def push(elem: A): this.type = synchronized[this.type] {
      super.push(elem)
    }
    

    then you explicitly specify the return type (here this.type). I assume that the compiler will not infer this.type – which states that you return exactly this object -, but that it would infer SynchronizedStack or one of its supertypes, which is not as precise as this.type.

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