"""The abstract supertype of all types representing definite
values. Any two values which are assignable to `Object`
may be compared for value equality using the `==` and `!=`
operators, even if the values are of different concrete
type:
true == false
1 == "hello world"
"hello"+" "+"world" == "hello world"
Singleton("hello world") == ["hello world"]
However, since [[Null]] is not a subtype of `Object`, the
value [[null]] cannot be compared to any other value
using the `==` operator. Thus, value equality is not
defined for optional types. This neatly bypasses the
problem of deciding the value of the expression
`null==null`, which is simply illegal.
A concrete subclass of `Object` must refine [[equals]]
and [[hash]] (or inherit concrete refinements), providing
a concrete definition of value equality for the class.
In extreme cases it is acceptable for two values to be
equal even when they are not instances of the same class.
For example, the [[Integer]] value `1` and the [[Float]]
value `1.0` are considered equal. Except in these extreme
cases, instances of different classes are considered
unequal."""
see (`class Basic`, `class Null`)
by ("Gavin")
tagged("Basic types")
shared abstract class Object()
extends Anything() {
"Determine if two values are equal. Implementations
should respect the constraints that:
- if `x===y` then `x==y` (reflexivity),
- if `x==y` then `y==x` (symmetry),
- if `x==y` and `y==z` then `x==z` (transitivity).
Furthermore it is recommended that implementations
ensure that if `x==y` then `x` and `y` have the same
concrete class.
A class which explicitly refines `equals()` is said to
support _value equality_, and the equality operator
`==` is considered much more meaningful for such
classes than for a class which simply inherits the
default implementation of _identity equality_ from
[[Identifiable]]."
shared formal Boolean equals(Object that);
"The hash value of the value, which allows the value to
be an element of a hash-based set or key of a
hash-based map. Implementations must respect the
constraint that:
- if `x==y` then `x.hash==y.hash`.
Therefore, a class which refines [[equals]] must also
refine `hash`.
Because the [[Integer]] type is platform-dependent
a compiler for a given platform is permitted to
further manipulate the calculated hash for an object,
and the resulting hash may differ between platforms."
shared formal Integer hash;
"A developer-friendly string representing the instance.
Concatenates the name of the concrete class of the
instance with the `hash` of the instance. Subclasses
are encouraged to refine this implementation to produce
a more meaningful representation."
shared default String string
=> className(this) + "@" +
formatInteger(hash, #10);
}