Kotlin: Use a lambda in place of a functional interface?

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北荒
北荒 2020-12-02 17:01

In Java we can do this Events.handler(Handshake.class, hs -> out.println(hs));

In Kotlin however I am trying to replicate the behavior to replace thi

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  • 2020-12-02 17:14

    A lot of nice things has happened to Kotlin since @andrey-breslav posted the answer. He mentions:

    It is that Kotlin only does SAM-conversion for functions defined in Java. Since Events.handler is defined in Kotlin, SAM-conversions do not apply to it.

    Well, that's no longer the case for Kotlin 1.4+. It can use SAM-conversion for Kotlin functions if you mark an interface as a "functional" interface:

    // notice the "fun" keyword
    fun interface EventHandler<T> {
        fun handle(event: T)
    }
    

    You can read the YouTrack ticket here: https://youtrack.jetbrains.com/issue/KT-7770. There's also an explanation why Kotlin needs a marker for such interfaces unlike Java (@FunctionalInterface is only informational and has no effect on the compiler).

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  • 2020-12-02 17:15

    Assuming below that you really need EventHandler as a separate interface (e.g. for Java interop). If you don't, you can simply use a type alias (since Kotlin 1.1):

    typealias EventHandler<T> = (T) -> Unit
    

    In this case a simple lambda will work right away.

    But if you don't want to use a type alias, the issue still stands. It is that Kotlin only does SAM-conversion for functions defined in Java. Since Events.handler is defined in Kotlin, SAM-conversions do not apply to it.

    To support this syntax:

    Events.handler(Handshake::class, EventHandler<Handshake> { println(it.sent) })
    

    You can define a function named EventHandler:

    fun <T> EventHandler(handler: (T) -> Unit): EventHandler<T> 
        = object : EventHandler<T> { 
            override fun handle(event: T) = handler(event) 
        }
    

    To support this syntax:

    Events.handler(Handshake::class, { println(it.sent) })
    

    or this:

    Events.handler(Handshake::class) { println(it.sent) }
    

    You need to overload the handler function to take a function instead of EventHandler:

    fun <T> Events.handler(eventType: Class<T>, handler: (T) -> Unit) = EventHandler(handler)
    
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