316
votes

What is the difference between a var and val definition in Scala and why does the language need both? Why would you choose a val over a var and vice versa?

12
Loved this question as I wondered the same thing.user2205916

12 Answers

347
votes

As so many others have said, the object assigned to a val cannot be replaced, and the object assigned to a var can. However, said object can have its internal state modified. For example:

class A(n: Int) {
  var value = n
}

class B(n: Int) {
  val value = new A(n)
}

object Test {
  def main(args: Array[String]) {
    val x = new B(5)
    x = new B(6) // Doesn't work, because I can't replace the object created on the line above with this new one.
    x.value = new A(6) // Doesn't work, because I can't replace the object assigned to B.value for a new one.
    x.value.value = 6 // Works, because A.value can receive a new object.
  }
}

So, even though we can't change the object assigned to x, we could change the state of that object. At the root of it, however, there was a var.

Now, immutability is a good thing for many reasons. First, if an object doesn't change internal state, you don't have to worry if some other part of your code is changing it. For example:

x = new B(0)
f(x)
if (x.value.value == 0)
  println("f didn't do anything to x")
else
  println("f did something to x")

This becomes particularly important with multithreaded systems. In a multithreaded system, the following can happen:

x = new B(1)
f(x)
if (x.value.value == 1) {
  print(x.value.value) // Can be different than 1!
}

If you use val exclusively, and only use immutable data structures (that is, avoid arrays, everything in scala.collection.mutable, etc.), you can rest assured this won't happen. That is, unless there's some code, perhaps even a framework, doing reflection tricks -- reflection can change "immutable" values, unfortunately.

That's one reason, but there is another reason for it. When you use var, you can be tempted into reusing the same var for multiple purposes. This has some problems:

  • It will be more difficult for people reading the code to know what is the value of a variable in a certain part of the code.
  • You may forget to re-initialize the variable in some code path, and end up passing wrong values downstream in the code.

Simply put, using val is safer and leads to more readable code.

We can, then, go the other direction. If val is that better, why have var at all? Well, some languages did take that route, but there are situations in which mutability improves performance, a lot.

For example, take an immutable Queue. When you either enqueue or dequeue things in it, you get a new Queue object. How then, would you go about processing all items in it?

I'll go through that with an example. Let's say you have a queue of digits, and you want to compose a number out of them. For example, if I have a queue with 2, 1, 3, in that order, I want to get back the number 213. Let's first solve it with a mutable.Queue:

def toNum(q: scala.collection.mutable.Queue[Int]) = {
  var num = 0
  while (!q.isEmpty) {
    num *= 10
    num += q.dequeue
  }
  num
}

This code is fast and easy to understand. Its main drawback is that the queue that is passed is modified by toNum, so you have to make a copy of it beforehand. That's the kind of object management that immutability makes you free from.

Now, let's covert it to an immutable.Queue:

def toNum(q: scala.collection.immutable.Queue[Int]) = {
  def recurse(qr: scala.collection.immutable.Queue[Int], num: Int): Int = {
    if (qr.isEmpty)
      num
    else {
      val (digit, newQ) = qr.dequeue
      recurse(newQ, num * 10 + digit)
    }
  }
  recurse(q, 0)
}

Because I can't reuse some variable to keep track of my num, like in the previous example, I need to resort to recursion. In this case, it is a tail-recursion, which has pretty good performance. But that is not always the case: sometimes there is just no good (readable, simple) tail recursion solution.

Note, however, that I can rewrite that code to use an immutable.Queue and a var at the same time! For example:

def toNum(q: scala.collection.immutable.Queue[Int]) = {
  var qr = q
  var num = 0
  while (!qr.isEmpty) {
    val (digit, newQ) = qr.dequeue
    num *= 10
    num += digit
    qr = newQ
  }
  num
}

This code is still efficient, does not require recursion, and you don't need to worry whether you have to make a copy of your queue or not before calling toNum. Naturally, I avoided reusing variables for other purposes, and no code outside this function sees them, so I don't need to worry about their values changing from one line to the next -- except when I explicitly do so.

Scala opted to let the programmer do that, if the programmer deemed it to be the best solution. Other languages have chosen to make such code difficult. The price Scala (and any language with widespread mutability) pays is that the compiler doesn't have as much leeway in optimizing the code as it could otherwise. Java's answer to that is optimizing the code based on the run-time profile. We could go on and on about pros and cons to each side.

Personally, I think Scala strikes the right balance, for now. It is not perfect, by far. I think both Clojure and Haskell have very interesting notions not adopted by Scala, but Scala has its own strengths as well. We'll see what comes up on the future.

62
votes

val is final, that is, cannot be set. Think final in java.

59
votes

In simple terms:

var = variable

val = variable + final

21
votes

The difference is that a var can be re-assigned to whereas a val cannot. The mutability, or otherwise of whatever is actually assigned, is a side issue:

import collection.immutable
import collection.mutable
var m = immutable.Set("London", "Paris")
m = immutable.Set("New York") //Reassignment - I have change the "value" at m.

Whereas:

val n = immutable.Set("London", "Paris")
n = immutable.Set("New York") //Will not compile as n is a val.

And hence:

val n = mutable.Set("London", "Paris")
n = mutable.Set("New York") //Will not compile, even though the type of n is mutable.

If you are building a data structure and all of its fields are vals, then that data structure is therefore immutable, as its state cannot change.

20
votes

val means immutable and var means mutable.

Full discussion.

13
votes

Thinking in terms of C++,

val x: T

is analogous to constant pointer to non-constant data

T* const x;

while

var x: T 

is analogous to non-constant pointer to non-constant data

T* x;

Favoring val over var increases immutability of the codebase which can facilitate its correctness, concurrency and understandability.

To understand the meaning of having a constant pointer to non-constant data consider the following Scala snippet:

val m = scala.collection.mutable.Map(1 -> "picard")
m // res0: scala.collection.mutable.Map[Int,String] = HashMap(1 -> picard)

Here the "pointer" val m is constant so we cannot re-assign it to point to something else like so

m = n // error: reassignment to val

however we can indeed change the non-constant data itself that m points to like so

m.put(2, "worf")
m // res1: scala.collection.mutable.Map[Int,String] = HashMap(1 -> picard, 2 -> worf)
9
votes

"val means immutable and var means mutable."

To paraphrase, "val means value and var means variable".

A distinction that happens to be extremely important in computing (because those two concepts define the very essence of what programming is all about), and that OO has managed to blur almost completely, because in OO, the only axiom is that "everything is an object". And that as a consequence, lots of programmers these days tend not to understand/appreciate/recognize, because they have been brainwashed into "thinking the OO way" exclusively. Often leading to variable/mutable objects being used like everywhere, when value/immutable objects might/would often have been better.

6
votes

val means immutable and var means mutable

you can think val as java programming language final key world or c++ language const key world。

1
votes

Val means its final, cannot be reassigned

Whereas, Var can be reassigned later.

0
votes

It's as simple as it name.

var means it can vary

val means invariable

0
votes

Val - values are typed storage constants. Once created its value cant be re-assigned. a new value can be defined with keyword val.

eg. val x: Int = 5

Here type is optional as scala can infer it from the assigned value.

Var - variables are typed storage units which can be assigned values again as long as memory space is reserved.

eg. var x: Int = 5

Data stored in both the storage units are automatically de-allocated by JVM once these are no longer needed.

In scala values are preferred over variables due to stability these brings to the code particularly in concurrent and multithreaded code.

0
votes

Though many have already answered the difference between Val and var. But one point to notice is that val is not exactly like final keyword.

We can change the value of val using recursion but we can never change value of final. Final is more constant than Val.

def factorial(num: Int): Int = {
 if(num == 0) 1
 else factorial(num - 1) * num
}

Method parameters are by default val and at every call value is being changed.