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Quite often in Java we see algorithms like:

MyObject currentObject = null 

for(MyObject oldObject: objects){
    if(currentObject != null) doSomething
    else doSometing
    currentObject = oldObject  
} 

I'm trying to implement this in Scala:

var currentObject: MyObject = null
for(oldObject <- objects){
    if(currentObject != null) doSomething
    else doSometing
    currentObject = oldObject  
} 

However, I'm receiving a Wrong Forward reference compilation error.

I guess the problems is with the initialisation as null of the currentObject?

UPDATED:

Here the actual code:

var protCoord:Coordinates     = new Coordinates()
var prevprotCoord:Coordinates = new Coordinates()
var coordMap = mutable.Map[Coordinates, GenomeCoordinates]()
var protein:EnsemblProteinEntry = null
var codingLength = 0

for (gtfEntry <- gtfEntries.toStream) {
  if (gtfEntry.isGene)
    mapping.addGene(new GTFGeneEntry(gtfEntry))
  if(gtfEntry.isTranscript){
    mapping.addTranscriptID(gtfEntry)
  if(protein != null) protein.multiMapCoordinates = coordMap // **I'm receiving the error here** 
    var protein = fastaEntries.getOrElse(gtfEntry.transcriptIdentifier, null)
  if(protein == null)
    protein = new EnsemblProteinEntry()
  protCoord = new Coordinates()
  prevprotCoord = new Coordinates()
  coordMap = mutable.Map[Coordinates, GenomeCoordinates]()
  codingLength = 0
}

Thanks in advance.

Alec
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ypriverol
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1 Answers1

2

Inside the loop you have var protein defined second time. The problem is that you try to use protein inside loop before it's defined.

Nebril
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